Hedwig and the Angry Inch Belasco Theatre, 30 April 2014.
Where to begin? I have been firmly in camp "Gentleman's Guide" all season. Now, my loyalties are evenly split. Expect each two win their respecting New / Revival categories and duke and out on everything else, with possibly a close split on some.
The conceit for this staging is perfectly. Perfect in tone to Hedwig and a perfect slay of so many Broadway offerings. I managed to get in early and snag a Hurt Locker Playbill and "LOL" plenty while listening to a pre-show soundtrack that (if you check your Hedwig Playbill) reveals itself to include offerings not only from the members of "The Angry Inch", but Lena Hall's band "The Deafening." Mayer (in probably his best work to date) and Mitchell have perfectly framed the show and the Belsaco Monologue and the banter throughout the show about the theatre and references to other musicals are not only informative, but gut-busting at times.
For those complaining that the show is too big, I whole heartedly disagree. They have less designed a show, than designed a space.. Much like the Kit Kat Klub or 54 Below. They created a space for this to happen. The specifics to Hedwig are what? Projections? She had those at the Jane in 1999. The band? Same. A small rack of costumes and wigs? Flashier, yes, but perfectly trashy and not out of line. The only 'bigger' element of Hedwig is one set piece for "Wig in a Box"... Everything else is the environment - the remnants of Hurt Locker - the Hedwig employs for her own delicious devises.
Julian Crouch's scenery almost makes me want to see what Hurt Locker would fully look like. Arianne Phillip's costumes are glitzy, over the top and never go so far as to be out of Hedwig's means. Mike Potter's hair and make up are almost across the board stellar. Tim O'Heir's sound is rock and roll loud yet always intelligible. Spencer Liff's musical staging is seamless. The real stars on the tech front are Kevin Adams' brilliant lighting and Benjamin Pearcy's astonishly good projections.
I can NOT get away without devoting something to Lena Hall, a woman I have always found to be a stellar rock singer with a reasonable legit voice and a passable actress, usually pleasing to watch but almost always miscast and misused. She is giving a career making star turn her. Absolutely unrecognizable - even in her body language - until she opens her mouth and spot on perfect the entire night. The heartbreak, the pain, the depression and the devotion are SO deep in her performance. Take a few moments to watch as Yitzhak is left to the side.. A 100% committed performance that will break your heart. You will cry when Yitzhak is finally given voice.. Not to mention the final moments of the show.
Now, the real draw.
Neil Patrick Harris can only be summed up with "wow". He disappears into this role and is simply brilliant. Watching the layers peel away through the night is spectacular. He can make you forget just about everyone. Absolutely jaw droppingly wonderful from the moment he descends to the stage amid a deafening (no pun) cheer, to an emotional climax, he is wonderful and his ad-libs and his wit make you fall in love.
For the record, the melding of performance and tech left me in tears during "Origin of Love". I dare you to not be in awe.
For those with a dislike for audience participation, avoid the first 8 rows of the orchestra, the house left aisle or the box seats. That is safely in what I can only call "The Hedwig Zone", where you can anticipate being spoken to, flirted with, kissed, licked, petting, caressed, mounted, motor boated, have water spat at you, props given to - or thrown at - you or to be heckled and chastised for leaving your seat... after all, it's only 95 minutes.
Haha. Namo, I gave away no legitmate spoilers, I went into no REAL specifics.. and what someone who has SEEN the show could identify is phrased so that it could be a spoiler to someone who has not seen the production.
Actually I just know how delighted I was by the little surprises I didn't have spoiled before I saw it and don't really think my suggestion was so outrageous. A little courtesy goes a long way.
Ah, the rub of BroadwayWorld... "tell us everything, tell us nothing." There are no spoilers in my post. If you read spoilers, it is because you saw it and you pit it together. I said nothing overt other than the actors showing layers, I talked about HURT LOCKER - which there is an entire thread on this board devoted, that the dialogue reflects the space - which is every production of Hedwig and NOT a spoiler, as it a concert, and that there is audience interaction, which you would expect at a concert, which people always ask a out, and I did not say what all WILL happen, merely what could at any given performance as Inlisted a variety of acts in tune with Hedwig. Yes, I included certain verbage that those who have seen the production will see and remember and those who who have mot will see as innocent non-spoilers unless they think too hard or ask elsewhere. Really people... It s a chat board. Let's chat without chatting. Heaven forbid you talk about a show. Did yiu know that Dolly traditionally dons a red dress, Peter ears green rights, a magic carpet flies in Aladdin and most shows have curtain calls?? I am damned for ruining. By the way.. SPOILER:: THE HOUSE LIGHTS GO DOWN AND THERE ARE USHERS.
Excellent review whole-heartedly agree with everything you've said. It was one of the most amazing times I've ever had at a Broadway show -- and I only saw the third preview. I'm sure it's even more amazing now. I'm seeing it again in July and I absolutely cannot wait.
omg Namo - omg- those seats are magical. When I approached my seat that night, I saw a woman sitting in it. I was just a little brusque (ahem) in telling....um, asking her to move. Lo and behold, it was one of my oldest and most favorite friends, whom I hardly ever see!!!!! We had quite the reunion. Her seats were just across the aisle.