I completely agree with my sister, wickedwitchofthechest! I've spent many a fun filled hour watching the video and laughing myself silly. In fact we don't tape over it just because sometimes we need to watch it to boost our own egos. It's really quite painfully funny. "Oh, make the pain go away!"
I should have eaten the saw and used the cake to bludgeon my way out - Alfred Hitchcock
Not a fan of the Hass, but, after seeing the show on Broadway with Robert, and seeing Dave on tv - it's not Dave who is bad. It's the show - the direction - the character. They are directed to be extremely overdramatic, and it really doesn't work - especially the transformation scene. There is a reason why it took ten years for J&H to make it to b'way - just as there is a reason they had to get Hass, Bach, and Wagner to play those roles...the reason is...the SHOW sucked!
"Do you know what pledge time is, Andrew"? said the PBS Executive.
"Yes", Lloyd Webber replied. "My 50th birthday special must be one program that gets done a lot."
"No", mused the man from PBS heedlessy. "Not so much. Our Stephen Sondheim Carnegie Hall concert. That's a big one."
Spoons, forks and knives seemed suddenly to suspend their motion in horror, all around the table.
I saw all of the Jekyll/Hydes other than Bob Cuccioli (sp?) and the understudies and Hasselhoff was pretty much laughably bad. They should have documented it like a year earlier, with Sebastian Bach! (and brad oscar, but thats just me)
Oh GOODNESS NO I don't miss him. Personally, I think it ruined the show's great image. They should have done the DVD with Christiane Noll, Linda Eder, and Robert Cuccioli, for sure. Of course, they probably wouldn't have had the support to even film it with no international names, but still, the original cast was what made a so-so musical amazing.
David Hasslehoff put money into making the recording - Otherwise it would have never been made...Darn that Hasslehoff!
"Do you know what pledge time is, Andrew"? said the PBS Executive.
"Yes", Lloyd Webber replied. "My 50th birthday special must be one program that gets done a lot."
"No", mused the man from PBS heedlessy. "Not so much. Our Stephen Sondheim Carnegie Hall concert. That's a big one."
Spoons, forks and knives seemed suddenly to suspend their motion in horror, all around the table.
"Do you know what pledge time is, Andrew"? said the PBS Executive.
"Yes", Lloyd Webber replied. "My 50th birthday special must be one program that gets done a lot."
"No", mused the man from PBS heedlessy. "Not so much. Our Stephen Sondheim Carnegie Hall concert. That's a big one."
Spoons, forks and knives seemed suddenly to suspend their motion in horror, all around the table.
Elphiez, i know Hasselhoff is awful but whats wrong with Coleen Sexton and whoever plays Emma on the DVD? Emma is great, and Coleen definitely gave an amazing performance (much better acting than linda, and has an amazing voice). I'm glad its different than the obc, because if i wanted to hear linda or christianne i could just listen to the ocr. Especially since Coleen is so much better.
I just watched the DVD a few nights ago and I didn't really know how to respond. I saw the show with Cuccioli, Christiane Noll and Linda's understudy when I was twelve. At the time I loved it, after watching it, I just feel like it was a cheesy show. The story has potential to be so intense (even if the book lacks the love interests), but it just felt cheesy. Andrea Rivette(Emma) and Collen Sexton(Lucy) were good, and made it bearable, but Hasselhoff ruined any nice moment. He was just BAD. I also am not fan of the ensemble dancing behind a scrim during many numbers. It was distracting.
LittleBit - The two leads who played with Hasselhoff were not bad, they both had good voices, but they were young. Wasn't one of them only 21? And lets face it, half of those songs were written for Linda Eder, so hearing her perform them to the utmost max was just amazing. Its hard for any performer to match her--especially when she's been singing those songs for over 10 years! I've never heard a better version of In His Eyes as Noll/Eder.
In any case, nothing against Rivette and Sexton, but I just preferred the other two. Yes it was a cheesy show, but I just saw it for Eder/Noll/Cuccioli because I loved all the voices!
"I've never heard a better version of In His Eyes as Noll/Eder. "
Amen to that. I saw the show in previews, April 1997. "In His Eyes" stopped the show. Literally. Not before or after have I experienced that kind of audience reaction-a standing ovation mid-performance.
I love that version of In His Eyes. And I will confess to owning the video and watching it too, it's just so damn hysterical. Does anyone else think that when he's transforming though he looks like he has a carrot stuck up his ass? And that his confontation is possibly the most agonising(and hysterical) thing in the world?
J'ai compris tous les mots, j'ai bien compris, merci.............