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Playbill OTR w/ WMTopia Review

Playbill OTR w/ WMTopia Review

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Playbill OTR w/ WMTopia Review#1

Posted: 12/30/07 at 12:07am

http://www.playbill.com/news/article/113686.html

Walmartopia [Leading Light LLC]
Walmartopia, the Off-Broadway musical currently winding up its run at the Minetta Lane, was a big hit at the Bartell Community Theatre in Madison. Madison, Wisconsin, that is. Cynics among us have learned to be cynical about Off-Broadway musicals from community theatres in smalltown USA, especially when they see a name above the title such as WMTopia, LLC. I have no knowledge of the identity of the individuals masquerading under this enigmatic mantle, but my guess is that they are either the authors, a married couple from Madison named Catherine Capellaro and Andrew Rohn; a consortium of Madison money from friends, neighbors and relatives (of the authors) who saw the show at the Bartell Community Theatre and pronounced it good enough for New York; a combination of the above; or someone with an ungainly moniker that wouldn't neatly fit the billing page, such as Winnie Moynihan Topia.

There is no reason that an unheralded sleeper from unknown writers should not be exceptionally good; 1776 came from some high school history teacher, and few people had ever heard of Clark Gesner when he turned up on St. Mark's Place with You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown. But Walmartopia has more in common with such recent offerings as Sessions, Mimi le Duck and that thing about Mary Todd Lincoln whose title I can't remember that was written by the wife of a former Congressman.

This one is subtitled "A Musical on a Mission," and has something to do with the disembodied head of Sam Walton and a group of Vermont terrorists. (Bentonville, Arkansas has become the capital of the world.) You can probably find a synopsis on the internet, but you might just as well skip it. Wal-Mart is, in many quarters, deemed to be the enemy of the world.

Walmartopia, though, engenders sympathy for Wal-Mart. The result seems to be sort of a feel-good Urinetown, with a bite so mild that you could can it, slap on a smiley face, and sell it for $2 in the bargain bin across from customer service. Ms. Capellaro and Mr. Rohn are not helped by the five-piece arrangements; if Urinetown sounds like early Weill, Walmartopia sounds like early skating rink.

Wal-Mart is also known for taking advantage of its poor, hard-working, under-appreciated employees. Fifteen card-carrying members of Actors' Equity give their utmost, under working conditions — material-wise — that are rather dire. Still, good jobs are as hard to find for actors in New York as they are for cashiers, stockroom clerks and assistant managers in the world outside show business. Walmartopia's Off-Broadway run — from Labor Day until the eve before New Year's Eve, plus the rehearsal period — should hopefully give them all enough weeks to qualify for a year of health coverage.


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