sorry, but that performance did nothing to make me want to see the show. Only word I could understand was "naughty".
A Chorus Line revival played its final Broadway performance on August 17, 2008. The tour played its final performance on August 21, 2011. A new non-equity tour started in October 2012 played its final performance on March 23, 2013. Another non-equity tour launched on January 20, 2018. The tour ended its US run in Kansas City and then toured throughout Japan August & September 2018.
ugh...hand-held microphones on the stage are a stupid device for an actor unless you are in a band or a performer within a play- boring otherwise and just a lazy affectation. could not understand one word expect "a little bit naughty".
If you missed it, you can see it on hulu tomorrow morning.
RE: the handheld microphone, Bruce is meant to resemble a pop/rock star at the beginning of the number. The hand-held mic is a working prop. It's meant to give Bruce a "rock star" moment at the beginning of the song (he ditches it as soon as his solo is over and recovers it at the end for the same effect).
oh... and just so there's no confusion... That number is not meant to parody/copy/"homage"/blah, blah, blah... Spring Awakening.
The accent issues are still there and the odd segue between songs notwithstanding, I thought it was a strong performance. The View also almost always has issues with filming musical performances, and that's certainly still evident in their filming of this performance.
Updated On: 5/22/13 at 05:12 PM
I really don't like Oona's accent. For those of you who saw Oona, was this performance on par with what you saw? I saw Sophia, and her accent sounded much less forced to me.
Wow, I thought people were joking about the unintelligibility, but that was really bad sound.
I'm a little surprised Warchus and Darling didn't try to reduce the similarity to Spring Awakening if they weren't going for that. Having Bruce pull a mic that looks just like the SA one from a place in his jacket that's the same place that the SA mics came from seems like an odd choice. There are other ways that part could have been staged to have avoided that comparison.
(Sorry, I wrote the wrong choreographer originally. )
I personally love the handheld mic. For anyone thats seen the show, maybe you can agree/disagree, but I believe it works fantastically in the way it is used in that moment during the show. It is very spur-of-the-moment, and the audience gets in a huge uproar when the see it. It is only used this once in the show, and not even throughout the entire song. I feel, and I may be wrong, that the mics in Spring Awakening represented more of a common theme throughout the show, and the mic here simply is just used in this one moment for added spunk.
Do they give you a libretto with your playbill so you know what the lyrics are?
"Oh look at the time, three more intelligent plays just closed and THE ADDAMS FAMILY made another million dollars" -Jackie Hoffman, Broadway.com Audience Awards
I saw Oona and I thought she did a fantastic job. It took a while to adjust to the accents. Sitting in the very last row of the balcony, it was tough at first. It didn't feel as forced though as it comes across here.
Are the kids lip-synching? They're not wearing mics, are they?
I think the sound was sub-par, but the show did a great job with the set design. It really captured the look and feel of the original. On Good Morning America, on the other hand, it looked like someone had hung up a blue shower curtain.
> "I'm a little surprised Warchus and Hoggett didn't try to reduce the similarity to Spring Awakening if they weren't going for that."
'Ya know what? You're absolutely right. I did some googling and noticed that this Spring Awakening copycat trend is everywhere!
British school children are so taken by the costuming of SA that they've begun to style themselves after the show:
And designers of men's suit jackets were so taken by the possibilities for "storage" that they've actually begun adding pockets to the insides of suit jackets! (Can you believe it??!!) Turns out they can be used for all kinds of things besides microphones, too. Who knew?
And speaking of microphones... The one-of-a-kind design of those wireless handhelds from SA were soooooo interesting that wireless mic manufacturers have started rampantly copying them. There are so many examples of these SA microphone copycats that I couldn't post all the pictures here, but you can just google "black wireless handheld microphones" (without the quotes) and then click on the "Images" link to see them.