
home | art & architecture | books & cds | dance | destinations | film | opera | television | theater | archives
|
||
|
||
|
||
The beginnings of rock and roll were a wild and crazy teen-age
revolution, when artists like Elvis Presley and Buddy Holly began making black music safe
for white audiences. But after half a century of Led Zeppelin, the Ramones, Michael
Jackson and Run-DMC, the old days cant help but look a little silly. Buddy: The
Buddy Holly Story, a theatrical tribute to the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer who died
in 1959 in a plane crash, is bound by its own rigid mantle of nostalgia. Youd better
be in love with the music or youre going to hate the show.
Buddy, the Rock N Roll Musical, first produced in 1989
and popular in London and elsewhere for years, is given a perky production in its San
Francisco engagement. Unfortunately, even a big, energetic cast that sings, dances and
plays musical instruments, cant hide the fact that the show is as hokey as a sock
hop. Grease,
a similarly nostalgic exercise in Broadway-styled entertainment at least had a story going
for it.
In Buddy there is no suspense, no dramatic tension and not
much of a plot. Buddy and the Crickets play their music, they get famous, Buddy gets
married, the group splits up, and then he dies. Thats about it.
Travis Poelle, the young actor playing Buddy Holly, is nimble-footed
and lively and plays the guitar like a real rocker. He carries the familiar songs, (20 of
them, from "Peggy Sue" and "Thatll Be The Day" to "Rave
On") with an all-American zest, and a pleasant enough voice. But the
"vignettes" that are little more than transitions between numbers, offer little
opportunity for him to create much of a characterization. The script is padded with
extended concert sequences at the Apollo Theatre, where the group won over a black
audience, as legend has it, and in the second act, Buddys last night on earth
is celebrated in a nearly 45-minute hit parade featuring not just Hollys singing,
but the other headliners who went down in the plane with him: The Big Bopper (Scott Free)
and Richie Valens (Davitt Felder).
On opening night, audience members jumped out of their seats at the end
of the show to dance with the music in a possibly nonspontaneous demonstration of joy. Buddy
plays to this sentiment, but it wont make you care about the artist himself.
June 11, 2004 - Michael Wade Simpson
| Buddy: The Buddy Holly Story Performed by Buddy Holly. Piano/Vocal/Chords Vocal Selections (Arrangements for piano and voice with guitar chords). See more info... |