'Curtains' is old-fashioned fun

Published: Friday, Oct. 9, 2009 6:21 p.m. MDT
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"CURTAINS," through Nov. 21, Hale Centre Theatre (801-984-9000); running time: 2 hours, 40 minutes (one intermission)

WEST VALLEY CITY — Not very often does a new musical comedy roll down the pike with all the glitz, glamour and charm of the good old-fashioned musicals of yesteryear.

Longtime songwriting duo John Kander and the late Fred Ebb, who also penned "Chicago" and "Cabaret," added a another one-word, starts-with-a-C musical to the arsenal, "Curtains."

The whodunit takes place in a Boston theater in 1959. There is a crime, a detective, colorful characters, sweeping melodies and big dance numbers.

With the show closing on Broadway last year, Hale Centre Theatre presents the regional premiere of the Tony Award-winning musical with plenty of glitz, although the stars don't completely align in the charm category … but they're close.

"Curtains" is filled with brilliant one-liners and wonderful character back-and-forth. On Wednesday night, it felt like the cast needed more time to spend with the characters and story to really flush out all that is there.

Paul Cartwright, single-cast as our hero, detective Frank Cioffi, grew into his trench coat.

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With a swagger and confidence of a seasoned performer, he seemed almost too suave to play the detective with a hidden love of musical theater — and someone who is giddy, awe-struck and hesitant with the ladies.

But by Act II, he settled nicely into the character, delighting the crowd with a very charming "Tough Act to Follow."

His romantic partner-in-crime, no pun intended, Cecily Ellis-Bills (double cast with Debra Weed Stewart) was perfectly wide-eyed and innocent with a lovely singing voice. (It's a shame she doesn't have more songs).

Other standouts include Camille Gerber Van Wagoner (double cast with Janae Gibbs Cottam), whose delightful sassy producer stole the show.

I was disappointed at some of the cuts the theater made to the role, however, as the character lost a bit of brass and wasn't able to grow as much.

Brandon Cecala (double cast with Quinn Allan Dietlein) delivered some lovely moments and gets to show off his piano-playing prowess as well — a real treat!

Bryan Finch's flamboyant director was also very funny.

Hilary Rose Holland's (double cast with Ashley Kathryn Mayfield) line delivery is very forced, but her dancing certainly isn't. I'd like to see her bring that same natural feel to her speaking.

In the glitz category, Hale shows off its stage.

The crowd applauded, but I found myself zapped out of 1959 to 2009, thinking, "Oh, they've reworked their carousel from 'Scarlet Pimpernel.' "

Recent comments

it seems like they don't chose their leads wisely in some...

Love Hale, but. . .  | Oct. 13, 2009 at 11:21 a.m.

I'm not in the New York critics circle and I wasn't offended at all....

Not Me | Oct. 12, 2009 at 10:42 p.m.

I saw "Curtains" on Broadway too and absolutely loved it. I'm going...

I saw it | Oct. 12, 2009 at 8:24 p.m.

Image
Hale Centre Theatre

Debra Stewart and Paul Cartwright star in Hale Centre Theatre's production of the musical comedy "Curtains."

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