“And It Did!”
Alex Getlin, Benjamin Eakeley, Justin Keyes, Jovan E'Sean, Mamie Parris. All photos: Carol Rosegg. |
So, seeing a splendid revue of
the cream of Maury Yeston’s crop at the York Theatre comes as something of a
revelation, as I never saw his biggest Broadway shows, Nine and Grand
Hotel, represented by nearly one-third (eight) of the 23 songs in Anything
Can Happen in the Theater: The Musical World of Maury Yeston. I saw
Broadway’s Titanic, and the Off-Broadway Death Takes a Holiday, but
not the other Off-Broadway shows on his résumé.
Justin Keyes, Mamie Parris, Benjamin Eakeley, Alex Getlin, Jovan E'Sean. |
Mamie Parris. |
Alex Getlin. |
Aficionados—the kind who listen over and over to cast albums—will
certainly know most songs’ provenances, and anyone familiar with the source
material of Grand Hotel and Nine will quickly link their songs to
those shows. On the other hand, half a dozen are not attributed to any show at
all.
Justin Keyes, Alex Getlin, Benjamin Eakeley, Mamie Parris, Javon E'Sean. |
The show’s conceiver, director Gerard Alessandrini, of Forbidden
Broadway fame, says in a program note that these “are from shows that Maury
wrote that never reached the boards, and some are independent songs not from
any specific project—and one was written specifically for this show.” For ignorant
viewers like me, it’s a shame that, at the least, none of these are so noted in
the program or given the benefit of a simple, identifying projection.
Mamie Parris, Alex Getlin, Javon E'Sean, Justin Keyes. |
That, however, is my sole quibble (well, okay, that title could be clipped) with this awesomely engaging overview of the best of Maury Yeston, who
wrote both the thoroughly delightful music and the unusually witty, touching,
or poetic—as the case may be—lyrics of one song after the other. Indeed, when
divorced from their original contexts, and insightfully interpreted by such an
attractive, superbly gifted ensemble as the three men and two women gathered
here, the lyrics assume an even more distinct clarity because you automatically
create your own situation for understanding and relating to them.
Javon E'Sean, Alex Getlin, Justin Keyes. |
A single pianist, the exceptional Greg Jarrett, is situated
up center within James Morgan’s elegantly simple, cabaret-style set of a sky
backdrop, a few platforms, and several arched, false prosceniums (think Radio
City Music Hall or the Hollywood Bowl). Notable are the panels displaying blown-up
images from Yeston’s scores.
Benjamin Eakeley, Mamie Parris, Greg Jarrett (at piano), Justin Keyes, Alex Getlin, Javon E'Sean. |
On this stage, perfectly lit by Jacob Zadek, the company sings
singly, in pairs, trios, quartets, or in full, its costumes (elegantly designed
by Melinda Hare) being either basic black, or a variety of character-defining
garments, like a chef’s toque and apron, or pink, silk pajamas. Gerry McIntyre’s
choreography is the ideal fillip for enriching the show’s visual charms with
creative movement that adds immeasurably to the experience.
Javon E'Sean, Justin Keyes. |
From the get-go, the ensemble—Benjamin Eakeley, Jovan E’Sean,
both tall and lanky, in contrast to the shorter Justin Keyes, the dark-haired Alex
Getlin and the blonde Mamie Parris—grabs you with its charisma, intelligence, and
vocal expertise, turning each number into a virtual show-stopper. (Both Keyes
and Getlin were in the show’s 2017 premiere at the Triad, which included Broadway
star Robert Cuccioli singing the songs now handled by Eakeley.)
Mamie Parris, Alex Getlin. |
Benjamin Eakeley. |
It’s a good thing the show keeps going, though, because you wouldn’t
want to miss a single note or lyric, starting with the entire company singing
the title song, an upbeat, comical lament about what actors have to endure.
YOU WANNA KNOW WHY I PUT UP WITH ALL THIS AGGRAVATION!
YOU WANNA KNOW WHY I AM STUCK IN THIS POSITION!
TO HAVE TO TOLERATE EACH IMBECILIC SITUATION
YOU WANNA KNOW WHY I AM STUCK IN THIS POSITION!
TO HAVE TO TOLERATE EACH IMBECILIC SITUATION
AND LISTEN TO SOME
RANDOM SCHMUCK IN AN AUDITION?
Javon E'Sean, Mamie Parris, Justin Keyes. |
From
then on it’s a continual can-you-top-this sequence, ranging from Parris’s jazzing
it up with a medley of “Shimmy Like They Do in Paree” (Death Takes a Holiday)
and “I Want to Go to Hollywood” (Grand Hotel) to E’Sean’s lovingly
sensitive “I Had a Dream about You” (December Song) to E’Sean, Getlin,
and Keyes’s brilliant sendup of classical composers’ names, “I Don’t Want to
Rock ‘n Roll,” to Eakeley’s teaching an infant in the soothing “New Words” (In
the Beginning) to Parris and Getlin’s hilariously rambunctious “No
Women in the Bible” (In the Beginning) to Getlin’s heartfelt “Strange”
to the inspirational (if ironic) “Godspeed, Titanic,” with which the entire
ensemble closes the show.
Javon E'Sean, Mamie Parris, Benjamin Eakeley, Alex Gitlen, Justin Keyes. |
Yeston’s
lyrics are often insanely clever. In “Salt ‘n Pepper,” for example, Keyes,
dressed like a chef and pushing a small cart on wheels about, does a standout
job of giving us knowing looks as he tosses off deliciously ribald, innuendo-enriched,
food-related lyrics. But they’re also touchingly lyrical, as in “You’re There Too”
(In the Beginning), sung by Keyes and E’Sean, and “Mississippi Moon,”
soloed by Eakeley.
Javon E'Sean, Alex Getlin, Benjamin Eakeley, Mamie Parris, Justin Keyes. |
The
title of Anything Can Happen in the Theater couldn’t be truer. I entered
the theater only casually familiar with Maury Yeston’s music. I left it . . . I
guess I have to say it . . . a fanboy. And I think you will, too.
York Theatre at St. Peter’s
619 Lexington Ave., NYC
Through December 29