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George Gershwin -- His Life & Music (1998), Ean Wood |
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The 1927 musical Strike Up the Band was the first collaboration
between the Gershwin brothers, George (music) and Ira (lyrics), and librettist George S.
Kaufman, whose comedies written with Moss Hart (The Man Who Came to Dinner) are classics of the
American stage. This powerful combination of
talents produced a then-new type of musical comedy that favored satire over purely
sentimental plots, harkening back to the great operettas of Gilbert and Sullivan. Strike Up the Band is receiving a
semi-staged revival by a new enterprise called BroadwayCurtain Up! The brain-child of Broadway veteran Martin Charnin
(Annie), who is the creative director, and
Keith Levenson, who is the musical director, this touring company of twelve performers and
twelve musicians provides a welcome opportunity to enjoy this early effort of talents
beginning to flower.
The plot is reed-thin and the
satire is light, but trenchant when you think about it.
The subject is the powerful influence big business exerts over politicians, an
evergreen topic that has all too much pertinence today.
The owner and namesake of Fletchers American Cheese Company decides that the
U.S. should go to war with Switzerland when the Swiss government objects to the imposition
of a 50% tariff on the importation of Swiss cheese. The
war engagement, which is paid for entirely by Fletcher, is orchestrated by a Col. Holmes,
a supposed confidant of the President who conveniently forgets to tell the President that
this war will be fought. It is a quick and
easy war, which Fletchers forces win. Upon
returning home Fletcher learns that Russia is objecting to a tariff imposed on the
importation of caviar, in which Fletcher has investments.
As the final curtain falls, Fletcher is again urging bellicose action.
The plot also includes two romances, one between Fletchers
daughter and a newspaper reporter who exposes wrongdoing at Fletchers operation, and
the other between Fletcher and a woman (Mrs. Draper) who accompanies the incompetent Col.
Holmes. Think Maggie and Jiggs for the latter
romance, and standard musical comedy for the former.
Silly jokes abound--Col. Holmes stays at the Venus de Milo Arms. The main delight of the show is the songs, which
include the famous The Man I Love and its reprise as The Girl I
Love. There are choral parodies (the
first one quotes directly from Gilbert and Sullivan), patter songs, and jousting duets,
notably a delightful number between Fletcher and Mrs. Draper entitled Ive Got
a Crush on You. An air of great cheer
permeates the evening.
The performers sell their material with enthusiasm. The updated musical arrangements are sprightly,
and Levenson has inserted quotations from famous Gershwin pieces (the oboe melody from Rhapsody
in Blue, music from An
American in Paris). A simple and
effective unit set, art deco in spirit, contains the musicians on the stage with the
performers in front. It would have been much
more effective if the evening had not begun with some unnecessary schtickthe cast
assembles and warms up as thought the curtain were down and the audience was not apparent
to them and then acts surprised when we are there. And there is a tiresome running (literally) joke
of a cast member who is late and runs across the stage several times. This smacks of playing to the yokels, not to
mention a lack of faith in the material. But
these are small quibbles. Maybe on their next
venture the creative team of BroadwayCurtain Up! wont be afraid to assume some
sophistication in the national audience for which this touring company is geared.
Berkeley, CA, March 22, 2002 - Larry Campbell