Saw the original and I am probably in the minority in saying I enjoyed it.
This will probably be terrible but they had me at "Kerry Butler."
And they had ME at "John Tartaglia"
Broadway Legend Joined: 6/25/14
YES!!!! YES!!!! YES!!!!
This show was my first Broadway show, I really love everything about it and so super excited that I get to see it again in some form or fashion here in NYC.
It's not really "opening." I mean isn't it more of a staged thing?
It's an extremely limited run. I saw this regionally a few years ago. I enjoyed it, but it was by no means the best shield ever. It was fun.
Broadway Legend Joined: 6/21/06
I saw it. Neither loved or loathed it. Was just ok.
Love the song "Stop Time" that the mom sings.
I don’t have my playbills in front of me to consult, but I saw the BIG national tour, which, according to Google, kicked off in early 1998. That means I was 16 or 17, still relatively new to musical theater, and I remember really enjoying it and only later learning of its un-terrific reputation. I haven’t revisited the show or score since then, so I’d be interested to see how I’d feel about it now. I mean, it wasn’t earth-shattering, but it was funny, touching, and had a couple of lovely songs. That’s my memory, anyhow.
I was a substitute usher at the Shubert Theatre during its original run. I then saw the non-eq tour at a college in NJ a few years later. IMO the Broadway production was FAR superior to the tour. The tour version was minus most of the teenagers and their songs. They also cut the number "Fun" to shreds. The licensed version is anything but "Fun".
The tour and Broadway productions have elements that I really like, but overall I prefer the Broadway production. However, I would love to see this Tartaglia is perfect for the role. Zachary Levi would also be excellent too, now that I think about it.
Leading Actor Joined: 10/2/08
I saw the original Big. I liked it, but sadly I couldn't get past the moment when the boy (13 years old?) in the man's body goes to bed with the leading lady because "he wants to know". I guess I'm really old fashioned, but wouldn't it have been more "noble" of him to decide "This is in my future. I don't need it now".
Well, at 13, it's damned hard to be "noble".
But at that point, he doesn't really know if he will return to his rightful age (at least that's how I remember the movie,) so...
It's just one of their concert productions they do for Musicals in Mufti though, right? The way this thread is written, I thought for a second York was doing a full Off-Broadway production.
Really enjoyed the Broadway production. The tour version was hideous.
I liked it, but sadly I couldn't get past the moment when the boy (13 years old?) in the man's body goes to bed with the leading lady because "he wants to know".
I thought it was interesting that his thoughts were expressed in the musical when it was lightly skimmed over in the film. But honestly, the song is far more noble than what would really be going through the mind of a 13 year-old boy.
Yes, it is just a Musicals in Mufti production.
I much enjoyed the original B'way production, and the album is quite wonderful. Daniel Jenkins could've won a deserved Tony for his performance, which was a true triple threat. Sadly, they reworked the show and threw out some of the better material (anyone here remember specifics?) The show's score wasn't the problem, but they apparently did a sort of "Carrie" overhaul. Too bad. It really wasn't that broken. I hear what is licensed is a tepid version of what is on the CD.
Roughly half the score was scrapped and replaced with inferior material. "Fun" was rewritten in 3/4 time signature and the kids were cut from the number (the tour only had three or four kids from what I remember). Basically, they removed all the fun from "Fun". "Cross the Line" was kept, but only had two kids in it, so it really made no sense. The wonderful opening number was replaced with "Say Good Morning to Mom" and "Here We Go Again" was replaced with one of the most irrelevant and useless songs I've ever heard, "My Secretary's in Love". The design was also completely scrapped for the tour and replaced with small, cheap, awkward day-glo creations. After having enjoyed the Broadway production, I took my brother the see the tour. I had to apologize profusely for not realizing it was a completely different show seeing as how he hated that tour production as much as I did and was baffled as to why I brought him to see it.
Oh, and the big toy store? It was reduced to two small slides on stage.
Broadway Legend Joined: 7/22/03
"Saw the original and I am probably in the minority in saying I enjoyed it."
Which is how Roxy likes it. It's the claim he stakes.
And most inexcusably (for me), I believe they added "Big Boys" for the Port Authority scene and scrapped one of my personal faves, "I Want to Go Home". Danny Jenkins sang that so touchingly in the Broadway version.
I saw the original. More accurately, I saw half the original. It featured some of the most terrifyingly plastic child performances I've ever seen. A few pleasant tunes, but nothing truly memorable. It felt processed, like Kraft slices.
And it should be pointed out (because some folks do care) that the Mufti series is piano-only and often book-in-hand; no production values, and not really a "production."
This was the first musical I was ever in, playing Billy in 1999. So I'm excited and nostalgic to attend this, though a full production would be more "fun."
My memory of our production is pretty similar to what I heard on the OBCR, and is consistent with bwayto's comments. We did have "Big Boys" but not "Cross My Own Street." I don't remember "My Secratary's in Love." "Fun" was definitely not in 3/4, and both that and "Cross the Line" were large production numbers.
I guess for licensing they figured local productions would have plenty of kids to choose from (relative to a tour), so they restored those elements.
I remember cramming this show in the Saturday before the Tony Awards. It was the last show of the season I had left to see. At intermission I turned to my partner and thought I softly said. "This is one of the worst things I have ever seen." The woman in the row in front of us turned around and said. "Then you haven't seen Passion yet."
Forgot about this story till I saw this thread.
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