“Don’t Stop Believin’”
It’s been well over three years since Rock of Ages, the
popular jukebox musical featuring a lineup of eardrum-shattering power ballads
from the ‘80s, closed out its six-year Broadway run. Judging by the excitement
of the surprisingly youthful crowd on hand at its Off-Broadway revival, many ready
to wave their arms and those little artificial lighters, the show’s producers
haven’t stopped believin’ that the show’s rock is ageless.
Mitchell Jarvis and company. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
It’s no longer news that Chris D’Arienzo’s book, stitched
together as an excuse to present a hand-clapping, toe-tapping, headbanging
array of ‘80s evergreens that—even if you were there but weren’t paying
attention—wormed their way into your brain if you were anywhere near a radio. Rock
of Ages is one of those shows that expresses itself through the lyrics of totally
unrelated songs from an eclectic bunch of sources. It brings back the hair metal,
anthem rock, pop rock, glam metal, call-them-what-you-will songs of Journey, Pat
Benatar, Jon Bon Jovi, Styxx, Twisted Sister, Foreigner, Whitesnake, Europe, Poison,
Steve Perry, and a list that, as the song says, goes on and on and on and on.
The New World Stages production—one of many that have rocked
international stages over the years, not to mention a Hollywood movie version
starring Tom Cruise—celebrates the 10th anniversary of the Broadway production.
It appears to be a pretty close replica of the one I saw sometime back in the
day with Constantine Maroulis playing Drew. Mitchell Jarvis, the original Lonny,
is back again, having played the role over 1,200 times.
CJ Eldred. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
Lonny is the sound man at the Bourbon Room, a rock club on L.A.’s
Sunset Strip owned by Dennis (Matt Ban) and threatened with demolition by a
greedy German developer, Hertz (Tom Galantich), and his oh-so-fey son Franz (Dane
Biren). This sets up the central conflict as the club needs to find a way to save itself.
Tom Galantich, Tiffany Engen, Dane Biren. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
Lonny also serves as the show’s Puck-like, mischievous narrator, and Jarvis,
who exudes personality from every pore, plays him as freshly as if he never
played him before. His material—much of self-referential about the show itself—may
be banal and its humor puerile but it takes a special cocktail of dancing,
singing, and comedic flair to sustain a part like his with such consistently bubbling fizz for nearly two and a half hours.
Tiffany Engen, Dane Biren, Tom Galantich. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
There’s not much to say about the flimsy book. It involves, firstly, the threat to the Bourbon Room and its block to make way for a
neighborhood transformation akin to what happened to Times Square over the past
few decades. But, naturally, there's also a principal romance between Drew, a long-haired, wannabe rock star,
doing janitorial work at the club, and Sherrie, who wants to be an actress and becomes
a waitress at the same place. She has a fling with the ultra-vain rock star, Stacee
Jaxx (PJ Griffith, in the role Cruise handled on film). It's highlighted by a rowdy sex-in-the-toilet-stall
scene but she gets dumped and becomes a stripper before finally hooking up with Drew. There are also a
couple of additional romantic subplots, one straight, one gay, both of them broadly farcical.
PJ Griffith and company, Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
You go to Rock of Ages for its music, not its plots
or subplots, or its string of incessantly raunchy juvenilia, with countless
humping movements, genital references, and grade school-level naughtiness, which these adults revel
in as if they’d just been given permission to smirk about boobies and nipples.
The music, though, if it’s up your alley, certainly shivers the timbres [sic!] with a
succession of vocally explosive and physically dynamic performances.
Mitchell Jarvis, Matt Ban, CJ Eldred. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
Jeannette Bayardelle, Kirsten Scott. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
Kirsten Scott. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
PJ Griffith and company. Photo: Matthew Murphy. |
New World Stages
340 W. 50th St., NYC
Through September 29