This Music Man is mostly playing Meredith Wilson’s hits. That best picture nominee pays tribute to the show’s strengths while making tweaks, updates and recontextualizations that sometimes place classic songs in a new light. The original Broadway run of The Music Man opened in the same season as the original West Side Story, and though the recent Steven Spielberg remake of West Side Story is a film and not a stage production, it can’t help but make its fellow revival from the class of ’57 look a little staid and traditionalist by comparison – even allowing for the fact that it’s a less revolutionary text to begin with. Is there something, anything, The Music Man might say about how we think about attractive scams and manipulations now, over a century past its 1912 setting? Maybe the answers to that question could turn facile or labored this version doesn’t show any interest in finding out. Much of the time, it attempts a mega-yet-modest balance of big-budget splashiness with a beating human heart underneath, and comes across like a high-energy cover rather than any kind of reimagining. If only this production acknowledged that shamelessness a little more directly, a little more cleverly. In other words, it’s a high-energy con worthy of Harold Hill.
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With an appreciative star-packed crowd applauding not just every introduction and musical number, but the appearance of a pool table – warming up for the inevitable (Ya Got) Trouble – and the occasional semi-clever flourish of stagecraft, it’s easy to feel either like a fan giving in to the will of the crowd, or a grump who’s pointedly refusing to.
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That razzle-dazzle could explain the decision to invite critics to the glamorous opening-night performance, rather than having a press night during previews. They’re the real spectacle, more so than the sometimes overly fussy sets and costumes even those with their own lines aren’t really playing fully realized characters here, but their big-group production numbers provide the passionate rush that Broadway audiences pay exorbitant prices to experience first-hand. Jefferson Mays and Jayne Houdyshell provide ample support as the sputtering Mayor Shinn and his wife, respectively beyond the marquee names and Broadway mainstays, the whole stage is packed with terrific young performers. This is particularly noticeable in the second act, which she periodically rescues the killer song score from its first-act front-loading. Sutton Foster plays the buttoned-up librarian Marion, who is immediately suspicious of Hill but starts to see the good in him even before he does, and she emerges as a formidable match for her co-star. It’s tempting to say that for the rest of this production director Jerry Zaks can’t match the star power at its center, but that’s not quite it – not exactly. That’s The Music Man all over Jackman slips into its rhythms effortlessly. He’s obviously fascinated by the ways that flash and charm can give way to a different, more nefarious form of confidence, and whether or not that can circle back to a kind of honorable flim-flam for the greater good.
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Though Jackman is best known for his nearly two decades playing the grim Marvel Comics superhero Wolverine, Harold Hill is of a piece with so much of his other film work: the smooth-talking embezzler of Bad Education, the carny-barker stylings of Real Steel, and his singing and dancing PT Barnum in The Greatest Showman. But when he brings a signature number like 76 Trombones or a smaller one like Gary, Indiana to a close, there is unmistakable joy in his eyes at times, facing the rapturous crowd reactions, he looked as if he might burst out laughing with glee. As Hill, a con artist disguised as a traveling salesman who moves in on a small Iowa town, selling the promise of civic improvement through musical instruments, uniforms and band instruction, Jackman is appropriately snaky and cynical – when he’s not pretending to be an upstanding musical impresario, of course. Throughout the swiftly paced production, Jackman looks like he’s been raring to go.