186.
DISASTER!
A 70S DISASTER MOVIE MUSICAL
A 70S DISASTER MOVIE MUSICAL
Yes,
it’s cheesy and silly. Yes, it’s overacted (deliberately) and reminiscent of an
inflated college frat show. But also yes, it’s about as much fun as you’ll
find in any Off-Broadway musical right now. And one more yes, about the only
thing serious about it is how you should be considering making a trip to St.
Luke’s Theatre on W. 46th Street to see one of its four weekly performances. DISASTER!
is anything but what its title implies and, for all its imperfections, will
provide you with two hours and 15 minutes of entertainment too clever to be as mindless
as it pretends to be. The marvelous Playbill cover says it all.
Tom Riis Farrell and Mary Testa. Photo: Jeremy Daniel.
This is the kind of energetic send-up
that revels in its own tackiness; its cheap sets and phony effects wouldn’t be
half as funny if they were more expensive and sophisticated. Everything about
DISASTER! reeks of the positive “let’s put on a show” energy that you might
expect of a bunch of talented youngsters who want to see how creative they can be on a dime. Taking the conception of Seth Rudetsky and Jack Plotkin, who wrote
the thing, a terrific cast made up of both little-known and better-known
performers, puts its talent where its mouth is and plays this parody of 1970s
disaster movies to the hilt, knowing just how far to push its farcical
excesses, and also how to put over the many pop songs of the disco era that
litter the script and get squeezed for laughs while reminding you of how musically
tasty many of them still are.
The show is set in 1979 on a casino ship
attached to a New York pier. On board are Sister Mary (Jennifer Simard), a dryly
pious singing nun with a gambling problem, and a ukulele slung across her back; Dr. Ted
Scheider (Mr. Rudetsky, the show’s co-writer), a disaster expert who keeps predicting
each disaster before it happens, although no one believes a word he says; the sleazy casino operator, Tony Delvecchio (Paul Castree, who alternates
with Jack Plotnick, the other co-writer); Marianne
(Maggie McDowell, understudying for Haven Burton when I saw the show), a
pretty, blonde TV reporter; Chad (Matt Farcher), a handsome waiter once engaged
to Marianne, who left him at the altar when she opted for her career over
marriage; Shirley (Mary Testa) and Maury (Tom Riis Farrell), an overweight
Brooklyn--judging by their terrific accents--couple celebrating 35 years of marriage,
although Shirley is dying of some disease; Levora (Charity Dawson), a
hefty black soul singer who carries a pet dog in her handbag; Jackie (Mary Birdsong), the ship’s sequin-gowned
headline entertainer, in a relationship with Tony; Ben and Lisa (Jonah Verdon),
a set of preadolescent twins played by the same cross-eyed child actor; and
several other ensemble players, all of them able performers who can sing, move,
and wreak comic havoc.
It takes some time to build up the
situations and introduce the caricatures (it’s hard to call them characters),
but when the pieces are in place, everything begins to crumble, tumble, and collapse hilariously as
the casino encounters, one after the other, an earthquake, an explosion, an inferno, killer bees, piranhas, sharks, and rats. The onslaught of disaster movie crises
has these folk looking for the escape hatches, but also finding
love and happiness amidst the ruins.
What makes it all work is the ridiculously
funny way Messrs. Rudetsky and Plotkin have interpolated familiar disco
(mostly) tunes into the show to highlight the multiple complications and catastrophes.
For example, when the guests are told they must evacuate the ship, they start
singing “Don’t Bring Me Down”; when Chad and Marianne recall their doomed
affair, he sings “Alone Again, Naturally”; when Sister Mary debates putting a
quarter in the slot machine, and is torn between her faith in Jesus and her
gambling compulsion, she launches into “Torn between Two Lovers”; Marianne
expresses her career vs. marriage conflict by singing “I Am Woman” and “You
Want to Marry Me”; Shirley and Maury, still happy after three and a half
decades of marriage, sing and dance to “You’re Still the One”; and the show finds room for
many other 60s and 70s standards, such as “Hot Stuff,” “Signed, Sealed,
Delivered,” “Feelings,” “Knock on Wood,” “You Make Me Live,” “Baby, Hold on to Me,”
“Stop, You’ve Blown It All Sky High,” “When Will I Be Loved?” “Don’t Cry Out
Loud,” “I’d Really Love to See You Tonight,” “It’s Daybreak,” and “Hooked on a
Feeling.”
Few
songs are sung in their entirety; often we get only a few bars or a slightly
longer, yet still truncated, version, but always enough to keep the action
moving and to get a laugh by the choice of music. The lyrics, while remaining
intact, take on new inflections by the way they’re interpreted within the
comical circumstances, which often find lodes of uproarious gold in them thar
words. One of the nuttier instances is when a character dies after being sliced
and diced by a falling ice sculpture and her husband gives her a burial by sea, throwing
each body part into the water as he sings, “Once, Twice, Three Times a Lady.” Another—which
you can see coming a mile away—is when Lisa, the twin, enters carrying a dummy
representing her injured brother, inspiring her to sing, “He Ain’t Heavy, He’s
My Brother.” And when Chad and Marianne finally resolve their romantic issues,
what better to mark it than “Reunited"? Much as you may love these golden
oldies, don’t expect to hear them in their pristine versions, but only as they
help to garner yucks in the context of the crazy carryings on in DISASTER!
Furthering
the silliness is the low-budget set of sliding and swiveling panels covered in
70s-style angled stripes by designer Josh Iacovelli, who also did the lights.
Brian Memesath’s costumes, which go heavy on the polyester, are a big help as
well. All the performers contribute to the fun, especially the always terrific
Mary Testa, whose bits include a wonderful Morse code number with the company choreographed
by Denis Jones in SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER style. Matt Farcher has a really good
tenor voice that brings true musical values to even his spoofiest numbers,
while Marianne Birdsong, new to the show, delivers both as a comedienne and
singer. Charity Dawson has that Aretha quality down pat, while Jennifer Simard’s
underplaying of Sister Mary is a perfect comic counterpoint to the frenetic
goings on around her. I also got a big kick out Jonah Verdon, the 13-year-old kid
who makes an indelible impression as both Ben and Lisa, using quick changes
involving a hat with a girl’s wig attached. Seth Rudetsky, who vaguely
resembles a George Hamilton clone gone seriously wrong, brings just the right touch of
camp to the “double Ph.D. scholar” who serves as the show’s persistent voice of
reason.
There’s
no question that what looks at first sight like a borderline amateur show is
actually being done with the highest professionalism by a cast of enthusiastic
hell-raisers and ship sinkers who unabashedly play directly to the audience
while never for a second losing the beat or the perfect timing of their
exaggerated shenanigans. Let’s face it. The material is thin, not all of it
works, and you wonder, when it comes, why an intermission is necessary and what more can be
yanked out of the tube in a second act. But when it’s all over you realize,
hey, you’ve had a really good time watching these screwballs facing
death and dismemberment from so many Hollywood-generated calamities. You may
even want to get home to dig up those 8 tracks again. Unless they’re buried in
the rubble or were eaten by the rats.