Timothy Meyers, Adrienne Barbeau, Garn Stephens, Jim Borrelli, Katie Hanley, Marya Small, Barry Bostwick, James Canning, Walter Bobbie. |
Ilene Kristen, Tom Harris, Dorothy Leon. |
Grease began life
in an impoverished Chicago basement theatre. When it came to hNew York, opening
Off Broadway on Second Avenue in the East Village, it took the town completely
by surprise, and quickly moved uptown to Broadway. Its reviews, largely
favorable, were not, however, the sort that would make history. This sleeper
must have shocked both its backers and its foes when it developed into what was
then Broadway’s longest running musical.
Of course, its eight-year record has been far surpassed since then by a number of seemingly eternal presences (albeit on hold because of Covid-19). It grossed many millions, was staged in countless amateur and professional versions worldwide, enjoyed two Broadway revivals, and had two movie adaptations. The producers, however, failed to repeat the formula with any other show, though they tried, and the creators were never represented on Broadway by another work.
Of course, its eight-year record has been far surpassed since then by a number of seemingly eternal presences (albeit on hold because of Covid-19). It grossed many millions, was staged in countless amateur and professional versions worldwide, enjoyed two Broadway revivals, and had two movie adaptations. The producers, however, failed to repeat the formula with any other show, though they tried, and the creators were never represented on Broadway by another work.
Timothy Meyers, Adrienne Barbeau, Tom Harris. |
Cast of Grease. |
A meager plot about a Sandra Dee-type of fresh-faced,
clean-cut, new girl in town, Sandy Dumbrowski (Carole Demas), and her troubles
with her local boyfriend, good-looking greaser Danny Zuko (Barry Bostwick),
allowed the introduction of a whole panoply of 50s’ adolescent pop clichés: hot
rods, DA hairdos, pointed wire bras, pajama parties, prom nights, dance
contests, mooning, bobby sox, drive-ins, and burger palaces.
Barry Bostwick, Carole Demas. |
Katie Hanley, Jim Borrelli, Walter Bobbie, Timothy Meyers, Garn Stephens, Adrienne Barbeau, Barry Bostwick, James Canning, Marya Small. |
John Lahr felt the show never explored its assumptions, but
used them for “camp” fun, thus failing to do its subject justice. Michael
Feingold, however, declared that, if there was a purpose, it was to reveal “how
petty and squalid it really was.” He preferred to think of Grease as “fun, a diversion . . . never meant to be anything else.”
Weaknesses jabbed at by others included a rambling,
unfocused book that neglected to maintain interest throughout, cheap and
unattractively profane characters (Martin Gottfried called them “shallow and
stupid”), repetitiousness, over-amplification, immoderate vulgarity, and
fondness for an era several critics remembered as impossibly dull.
Grease’s “loud and
raucous” music, as Barnes dubbed it, was “often attractive” to Walter Kerr’s
ears, and “fraught with demented fun” in John Simon’s view. Gottfried, though,
thought it too devoted to mimicking the “corniest” period pop tunes and not the
best.
Some knew right away that Grease was a hit, among them Jack Kroll, who though it “hugely
entertaining,” and Douglas Watt, who called it “a winner” that rocked “with zip
and charm.” Few argued against Douglas W. Schmidt’s effective stage
design—the proscenium outlined in old high school album photos; Carrie Robbins’s
insightful, humorous costumes and hairdos, Tom Moore’s brilliantly realized
direction, and Pat Birch’s deliciously on-the-spot choreography. Among the
stunning performers, all obviously older than the roles they were playing,
Carole Demas, Barry Bostwick, Adrienne Barbeau (as Betty Rizzo), and Timothy
Meyers (as Kenickie), were most often singled out.
The show garnered a pile of Tony nominations but won none of
them. They were for Best Musical (Two
Gentlemen of Verona won); Best Book of Musical (again, Two Gentlemen of Verona won); Leading Actor in a Musical (Barry
Bostwick lost to Phil Silvers in the revival of A Funny Thing . . . ); Featured Actor in a Musical (Timothy Meyers
lost to Larry Blyden in A Funny Thing . .
. ); Choreography (Patricia Birch lost to Michael Bennett for Follies); Costumes (Carrie Robbins lost
to Florence Klotz of Follies); and Featured
Actress in a Musical (Adrienne Barbeau lost to Linda Hopkins in Inner City). Barbeau did reap a Theatre
World Award, while Robbins was given the Drama Desk Award for Most Promising
Costume Designer.