78. LET IT
BE: A CELEBRATION OF THE MUSIC OF THE BEATLES
If
you ever wondered whatever happened to those screaming American teenagers who
can be seen fainting and hyperventilating in old clips of the Beatles at their 1965
Shea Stadium concert wonder no more. They’re in the audience at LET IT BE, the
latest Beatles tribute concert on Broadway (it debuted last year in London),
following BEATLEMANIA (1977) and RAIN (2011), shaking their booties, a word
that didn’t exist back in the day (at least not these kinds of booties), and
acting for all the world as if they were in the presence of the actual John,
Paul, George, and Ringo. Actually, I’m exaggerating just a bit, since the kids
of 1965 would now be in their early to mid-60s and the more exhibitionist members
of the beatlemaniac pack at the St. James are maybe 10 or 15 years younger, and
were probably infants when the Beatles arrived on these shores. Nonetheless,
there were plenty of people in their 60s and older standing and waving and
shouting and jiggling and singing along during the two acts of LET IT BE, and I
myself, staid keeper of these records, had to stand a few times just so I could
see what was happening on stage.
St. James Theatre, W. 44th Street.
My introduction to the Beatles came
while I was in graduate school at the University of Hawaii in 1963, when I wandered
into a record store in Honolulu’s Ala Moana shopping center. There, piled on
tables at the front of the store, were recordings of this latest British boy
band, with likenesses of their mop headed faces, attached to cardboard posters,
bouncing around on springs. In a flash, their music was everywhere, and it
became impossible to ignore them, even though I took a little longer than most
to become a follower. My son Justin, on the other hand, born in 1967, grew up
to become a Beatlemaniac, collecting every bootleg concert and studio recording
he could get his hands on and reading every book and article on the Fab Four,
to where he knew every published detail about their lives and music (much as he
also does about Queen). So he was my guest at today’s performance, and my expert
advisor on the authenticity of what he saw and heard.
Both of us agreed that the only
performer who looked and sounded most like the Beatle he was playing was Graham
Alexander, a terrific 23-year-old who won a Drama Desk Award for his work in RAIN.
Justin noted the physical disparity among the members of the quartet, saying the
original band members were all about the same size. And we shared the opinion
that the actor playing the quiet one, George Harrison, was the least charismatic,
although he did a rousing cover of “While My Guitar Gently Weeps.” (It’s really
hard to comprehend how many brilliantly memorable songs these guys created.)
The others, Ryan Coath as John Lennon and Chris McBurney as Ringo, were fine,
although McBurney bears absolutely no resemblance to the famous drummer. Justin,
who has seen many other tribute bands do the Beatles, had no serious qualms
about the singing, which he felt was close enough to the great Liverpudlians to
carry the music. I learned afterward that the cast rotates with other
performers, so the cast I saw may not be the one you see if you go. I also should
note that none of the actors is credited with a named role, nor are the names
John, Paul, George, and Ringo even mentioned in the show; instead, the Playbill
lists their roles as “Musician,” probably because of some legal technicality.
As has been reported in recent months, the producers of the RAIN have been
suing LET IT BE for some sort of copyright infringement, so perhaps there’s
some connection.
Apart from the opportunity to hear 40
great Beatles’ tunes, the show itself is not especially exciting, despite a
hyped-up Broadway audience that would have stayed well past the final curtain
to hear their favorite songs. They came to see a Beatles concert, not KING
LEAR, and they floated out as if they’d just been on a real-life magical mystery
tour.
The curtain is decorated with huge old-fashioned TV
sets and a radio dial, with video images being played on the screens showing
old news clips, commercials (including cigarette spots later in the show),
Beatles questions, and the like. When it rises we’re in The Cavern, Liverpool,
and the young Beatles begin rocking through one up-tempo, foot-stomping, over-amped,
lyric-swallowing number after another; finally, we get to that gorgeous ballad “Yesterday,”
which sounds even better coming as it does after so many hard-rocking songs. Apart
from ersatz voiceovers copying old broadcast interview comments and other
remarks (including a poor imitation of Ed Sullivan), there’s very little
narrative or dialogue to explain the context of the leaps forward in time that
take us on a trip through the group’s musical history; the changes in music,
matched by changes in costuming, facial hair and wigs (much too phony), are
only roughly chronological, and Justin pointed out numbers that had come
earlier than the period in which the show placed them. The expected milestones
are dutifully recreated, including the band’s appearance on Ed Sullivan, their
enormous concert at Shea Stadium, their HARD DAY’S NIGHT movie, their “Sergeant
Pepper” album (with its outlandish silk costumes), and finishing with “Abbey
Road.” All is played against a simple environment of brick side and back walls,
with loads of projections, videos, and lighting effects that grow increasingly
more complex as the show proceeds, including psychedelic images that cover the
entire inside of the theatre.
The audience either already possesses whatever Beatles
history it needs to know, or, more likely, couldn’t care less as long as they
can drown in the sounds and experience the evolving styles for which this
astonishing band was responsible. This becomes particularly evident in act two,
when the rock and roll of act one morphs into the more adventurous and
revolutionary music introduced, according to Justin, on the “Revolver” album,
and then influenced by the hippie, antiwar, and drug taking activities of the
late 60s. The audience’s enthusiasm increasingly appeared to be manipulated by
Gareth Owens’s sound design of raucous fan reactions played over the
loudspeakers and blending with the sound of the live audience’s own noisy
responses. I had fun watching the not-so-young spectators
jumping up and down and dancing in the aisles and side balconies as if they
were not at a Broadway theatre but at MSG or any other giant concert venue. When
the show proper ended, the house lights remained dim as the audience clamored
for encores, and, of course, after a suitable hiatus, the boys came back and
gave us “Give Peace a Chance,” “Let It Be,” and “Hey, Jude.” And still the fans demanded more.
This is a show mainly for Beatles fans, tourists, and
nostalgia geeks. It’s conventional, has nothing new to offer, and is merely an
excuse for revisiting one of the greatest bands of all time in the person of
wax statues that have come to life, but necessarily lack the heart and soul of those they
represent. I was very happy that my Beatlemaniac son had a chance to enjoy it,
despite some minor cavils; had he not been such an avid fan, I might just have
let it be.