Theater Review
When Bob Martin’s friends decided to provide their own, original entertainment for his pre-wedding party, the idea for “The Drowsy Chaperone” was born. They wrote and performed several songs, imitating 1920’s musicals and plugging into the script the names of Martin and his fianc’e. Now, seven years later, Martin is starring in the musical he co-wrote with his fellow Toronto Second City alums Don McKellar, and Lisa Lambert and Greg Morrison (music and lyrics). The Center Theatre Group production plays at the Ahmanson Theatre through December 24. “The Drowsy Chaperone” takes a different approach to reviving vintage musicals; it revives a fictional one that mocks in a most celebratory manner the spirit and culture of Jazz Age musicals. The highly entertaining show incorporates leg-kicking song and dance numbers with quirky characters who represent the stock characters of 1920’s musical comedy’the Latin lover, the gangsters, the chaperone. Martin plays the narrator, called Man in Chair, a boyishly exuberant aficionado of old musicals, eager to share with the audience his all-time favorite’Gable and Stein’s “The Drowsy Chaperone.” Though we join him in the present day, his shabby studio apartment, “Mr. Rogers” attire (a cardigan and corduroy pants), and passion for a bygone era help set the mood for traveling back in time. And sure enough, soon after he turns on his record player to indulge us with his cherished recording of the 1928 musical, it comes to life on stage with a full cast and orchestra. The plot involves a Broadway showgirl who is about to be married, and her producer’s attempts to foil the wedding plans; the bride and groom are called Janet and Robert, after Martin and his wife. Throughout this show within a show, Man in Chair offers commentary on various elements of the musical, from its more progressive moments and underlying messages to its dated scenes and the tragic real lives of the actors. During one musical number, he tells us to focus on the melody and not to listen to the lyrics because they’re so bad. Martin delivers these humorous notes and digressions with great naturalness, watching intently from his bed or cross-legged on the floor and then leaping up to stand adoringly next to one of the stars. His favorite character is, of course, the chaperone (Beth Leavel), whose solo “As We Stumble Along” he calls “a rousing anthem about alcoholism” and adds, “My mother was like that.” He also admits that he has a crush on Robert (Troy Britton Johnson) and gradually reveals details about his own traumatic childhood and marriage. He is most critical of the actor who plays the Latin lover Aldolpho, whom he calls “a man of a thousand accents’all of them insulting.” (At one point, the audience gets a glimpse of one of these other degrading performances.) It’s fun to have someone as passionate as Man in Chair guiding us through the outrageously silly musical and providing an amusing context for interpreting certain scenes, such as the one between the two leading ladies’the rising star and the established actress’in which the latter steals the show. Supporting Martin’s performance is a talented cast of singers and dancers, including Tony Award-winner Sutton Foster (Millie in “Thoroughly Modern Millie”), who plays Janet. With a powerful voice and endless, delightful energy, Foster performs “Show Off,” executing one-handed cartwheels despite an apparent wrist injury. This musical number validates the narrator’s statement that “[‘The Drowsy Chaperone’] does what a musical is supposed to do; it takes you to another world, giving you a tune to keep in your head.” Leavel is well cast in the part of the dark, seductive chaperone, lounging and strutting her stuff in a slinky, beaded chocolate-colored two-piece (costume design by Gregg Barnes). She and Danny Burstein, who plays Aldolpho, perform one of the most comical duets, “I Am Aldolpho.” Georgia Engel (who played Georgette on The Mary Tyler Moore Show) and Edward Hibbert also have chemistry in their parts as the clich’d dowager Mrs. Tottendale and her servant, Underling, although a couple of their gags are a bit worn. The “special effects” are impressive, such as the moment when the record skips and the ensemble repeats the same phrase over and over until it’s fixed, or when Man in Chair replays one segment several times in attempt to discern the chaperone’s final words of advice. The actors perform these challenging parts with impeccable timing and cohesiveness. One of the most suspenseful scenes comes when Man’s electricity shuts off and a worker who comes to fix it walks blindly through a sea of “imaginary” figures paused in the darkness of the room. Director and choreographer Casey Nicholaw (of Monty Python’s “Spamalot” on Broadway) has staged a visually dynamic and heartfelt production that keeps the audience engaged, even during the narrator’s Power-Bar break, which replaces the usual intermission. The show runs nearly two hours but does not feel too long. Following its early success at the Toronto Fringe Festival and positive reviews here in Los Angeles, “The Drowsy Chaperone” may just be headed for Broadway. Tickets are $20-$90. For performance dates and times, visit www.CenterTheatreGroup.org or call (213) 628-2772.