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Weekend Agenda: Smash(ed) Edition

This week The Book of Mormon became the first real smash of the season—indeed, of the last few years—over at the Eugene O’Neill.  Superstar Daniel Radcliffe talked to the press about Broadway and that little blip of a film franchise he once started in.  And NYMag commissioned a hilarious ice sculpture inspired by the woes over at the Foxwoods Theater where the word smash is more of a verb than an adjective.  Some things to note:

  • The Book of Mormon, which has been over 100% capacity for weeks now, earned itself near unanimous raves last night, making the ticket situation there even more costly and precarious. We’d never begrudge anyone on Broadway their success, except… we are kind of begrudging Mormon its success this minute. I mean, how are we ever going to win the ticket lotto now?!
  • Ramin Karimloo, who we are still obsessed with, called someone a “candy ass” on Twitter last night. Which is almost as amazing as this photo.  Almost.  …Okay, not really. Nothing is as amazing as that photo. But. We’re bringing “candy ass” back into our lexicon anyway.
  • Over at Spider-Man: Our Show is Awful the entire Geek Chorus was apparently given the boot this week. Thank you Sweet Baby Jesus. We’d make a joke about not letting a set piece hit them on the way out, but… Josh Malina beat us to that gag weeks ago. Damn him.
  • Speaking of that damn show—NYMag commissioned an ice-sculpture entitled “Sad Julie Taymor” in which she is ensnared in her own web of… disaster and grief?  Try not to laugh out loud when you see it.
  • In an interview with the AP, Daniel Radcliffe credits the Harry Potter franchise for affording him the opportunity to star on Broadway. In other breaking news, apparently the Pope is a Catholic man.
  • Audra McDonald confirmed that she will play Bess in the upcoming A.R.T. production of Porgy and Bess in Boston.  Which is, you know, just about everyone’s dream casting come to life.  We may have screamed when we heard.
  • Apparently the famed feud between Priscilla’s Nick Adams and Mario Lopez—over who’s biceps were more impressive, natch—was all nonsense? We call shenanigans. This feud is too awesome to be fake. We simply won’t allow it.
  • Full casting was announced for the NY Philharmonic’s Neil Patrick Harris-led Company. We promptly began contemplating offering to exchange sexual favors for tickets. Our parents would be real disappointed, but like… if we get to see the show, will that matter?
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Remember That Time We Threw a Party?

The staff was real curious to see who belonged to that party.

Not all that long ago The Craptacular reached its first birthday.  To celebrate a year of snarky tweets, overuse of the word boner, and several odes to Gavin Creel’s good looks/golden voice, we threw a party.

A couple weeks have passed, but we wanted to be very sure we thanked each and every awesome friend who came to celebrate with us.  You guys make running The Craptacular a joy.  So thanks!  We’re so glad we had a chance to raise a glass with you and toast this past year.

Also, we cannot forget to thank the folks who donated our excellent prizes:

And some other awesome people, without whom our party probs would have sucked: the folks at the Village Pourhouse (especially our wonderful, overworked waitress) and The Mick’s lifelong friend Nicole B who is obviously the best.

We had an amazing, amazing night.  And if we didn’t see you this year, we look forward to seeing you next year.  There will be plenty more potty-mouthed tweeting to celebrate by then!

An early crowd snap (l) and the formerly elusive Lucky & The Mick (r)

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(But I’m giving Tom Riley all the credit.)
(Okay. And maybe David Leveaux. And Billy Crudup. And Raul Esparza.)

My senior year of high school we read Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead and it made me want to die too. Or, you know, never read Tom Stoppard again. Ever. (That play is one of two pieces of literature this big-mouthed-know-it-all has ever outright refused to discuss, debate or opine over obnoxiously. I thought my teacher/class was going to die of shock.)

In the years since high school, I have not touched a piece of work by Tom Stoppard, on Broadway, off Broadway, or anywhere else. So you can imagine my trepidation when it came time to see the revival of Acadia which opened last night at the Barrymore Theater.

But no amount of trepidation could stop me from seeing a show featuring two of my favorite actors, Raul Esparza and Billy Crudup, and I probably owe them for opening my eyes to the potential in Stoppard. Or at least for getting me over my silly grudge.

Arcadia isn’t perfect. There are still problems with the material most of which are kind of inherent in Stoppard. There’s so much dialogue—real people don’t talk this way, and they never did—and it is relentlessly cerebral to the point of insanity.
But David Leveaux has mounted a production which triumphs over the material. Indeed, it makes the material kind of triumphant. And sexy. Ridiculously, panty-knottingly sexy.

The play, set in the same room in two different centuries, explores genius and madness, history and reality, and the very human search for meaning in the structures of the world around us. It’s a complex story—loaded with dangerous shit like math and religion and gender politics—and the dialogue is sometimes difficult to keep up with. But ultimately, Arcadia succeeds thanks to the compelling performances that Leveaux’s clear, concise direction brings forth.

Tom Riley’s performance as lead Septimus Hodge is particularly remarkable. He delivers Stoppard’s tongue-twisting, witty dialogue with a thinly veiled glee and an arch eyebrow raise that makes you want to smack him around a bit—pitch perfect for the rakish Hodge. His performance is an unexpected joy to witness. In fact, surrounded by several notoriously sexy, commanding stage actors, Mr. Riley steals the show without even breaking a sweat.

That said, Billy Crudup turns in a wonderful performance as academic Bernard Nightingale; his fervent energy and powerful physical presence give Nightingale the perfect mix of douche-bag intensity and intellectual enthusiasm. Meanwhile, Raul Esparza is saddled with a far less dynamic character in Valentine Coverly, but he finds moments of inner light and heat, especially when interacting closely with unrequited love interest Hannah Jarvis (convincingly portrayed by Lia Williams).

These performances weave together to form a tapestry of remarkable vitality. Stoppard’s play itself may not be quite perfect, but perfect performances elevate the material into something truly amazing to behold. I left the theater a lot less opposed to the existence of Tom Stoppard and more than ready to pick a date to return and continue unwinding the intricacies of Arcadia.

Photo: Carol Rosegg

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It’s Friday, baby! New shows are opening! It’s spring, which means that we can feel our hands again! It’s Sutton Foster’s birthday! Reasons for celebration, all. This week at The Craptacular, we yammered on about the foxy men of Arcadia, new songs from Carner and Gregor, and the finer points of recycling pop hits for Broadway. But our favorite contributors to the site this week were… our readers. Check it out…

  • Commenter Ben, who somehow found our Love Never Dies review like, months after it happened, left us some detailed and passionate feedback that compares The Phantom of the Opera to a baseball-bat-toting gorilla. We laughed. Read it to believe it.
  • In less (or possibly more?) amusing news, this comment on The Mick’s Wicked piece called us, and our readers, morons. This wouldn’t be all that big a deal, except that we smelled a shill. If “Stella” (and whoever is paying her) is reading, we’d just like to say nice work coding the trademark symbols. Very professional of you.
  • We swooned over this incredible list, assembled by a fan on Tumblr, of every American and British Phantom and Christine from the beginning of time. Swooned! Swooned, I tell you.
  • And speaking of Ramin Karimloo, and we were, the Olivier Awards were handed out on Sunday in London. Legally Blonde took the top musical prize, proving that the English empire really is in decline. Ramin didn’t win, but he opened the show with “Til I Hear You Sing,” and in truly Phantom-like fashion (phashion?), he sang his damn face off.
  • Still speaking of Ramin Karimloo, how about Les Miz on TV? Between the two of us, we’ve watched it approximately 10 times. Never mind that it stars a squinty Nick Jonas, and that the fake marching has been dialed back to a scant few seconds in “One Day More.” Nothing on earth soothes us, or prompts us to rock back and forth in a corner, drooling and sucking our thumbs, like Les Miz.
  • Is Jonathan Groff coming back to Glee? Nope! He’s not!
  • The New York Times reported that Aaron Tveit beat out both Gavin Creel and Matthew Morrison for the lead role in Catch Me If You Can. Oh to have been in that waiting room. Not to feel the tension or anything, but just to see all those beautiful people in one place.
    Now, imagine this. You are now a magical casting director. Wave your magical casting director wand.
  •  

    Who would you have chosen to play Frank Abagnale, Jr. in Catch Me If You Can?

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    New Stuff Alert: Carner & Gregor

    So, we like new musical theater a lot.

    And we spend a lot of time seeking out new musicals and composers, partly because it’s fun, and partly because we like to be first to the party in all matters, including the very important matter of when someone writes the next Rent.

    This week, we hit up a showcase in the East Village that featured the songs of Sam Carner and Derek Gregor, a youthful, massively educated (Skidmore, NYU, Yale) songwriting team who dedicate themselves to writing musical theater. A cool thing about this concert? It featured a cast of incredibly talented, and equally young singers, many of whom were making their New York City debuts. (Would-be superstar Damon McToy was there, natch.)

    Our favorite moment of the night, though, was when Carner and Gregor themselves took to the stage to sing a new composition entitled, “My Vagina is Not the Highway to my Heart.” We liked it because the title is clearly awesome and because we’d love to see that printed in a Playbill someday, and also because Sam Carner possesses that very endearing Sondheim-like quality of… um… not being able to sing all that well. To semi-quote him, pitch, in this case, is a mere suggestion. Check out the video:

    Video: BwayWatcher

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    The stage at the Barrymore Theater, where Tom Stoppard’s Arcadia opens on Thursday, is loaded with hotties these days.  Between Tom Riley, Billy Crudup and Raúl Esparza—the rakish lead Septimus Hodge, douchey professor Bernard Nightingale and lovestruck mathematician Valentine Coverly, respectively—it’s almost impossible to know where to look first at curtain call.  This is not a complaint.

    But wait.  What’s that you say?  You’d like to know more about these fine-ass gentlemen?  Well.  You’ve come to the right place.  Below, a few fun facts about the men of Arcadia:

    • All three actors have played Septimus Hodge at one time or another in their careers.  Billy Crudup even described playing the role as “winning the lottery.”
    • Speaking of Mr. Crudup, he is perhaps best known for his turn as rock star Russell Hammond in Cameron Crowe’s 2000 film Almost Famous—the semi-autobiographical story of a teenaged rock writer who followed a rising band on tour.  Even if you prefer musical theater to rock and roll, the film is worth a watch for its insightful portrait of fans’ relationships to the music they love most.
    • British actor Tom Riley once played another historical rake—Mr. George Wickham—in the 2008 BBC mini-series Lost in Austen. The mini-series was a fantasy adaption of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, which sent a modern-day girl back in time to live in the novel.  Riley’s Wickham, besides being handsome and charming, offers a totally different look at the much maligned character.
    • Stage-star—and Craptacular favorite—Raúl Esparza has been nominated for a Tony Award in all four categories for which actors are eligible.  Sadly, he has yet to take the trophy home.  To comfort ourselves over this atrocity, we like to imagine Raúl and Jonathan Groff hugging it out in the men’s room after their 2007 loss to David Hyde Pierce in the Lead Actor in a Musical category.

    Photo: Carol Rosegg

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    priscilla

    From punk to Jeff Buckley to Billy Joel, just about anything counts as a showtune these days. Priscilla Queen of the Desert, which opens at the Palace Theatre on Sunday, features a playlist of pop, dance and disco songs that are culled straight from the Top 40. And from other Broadway shows. Here are just a couple that you may have heard before… on stage.

    “I Say a Little Prayer”
    This Burt Bacharach standard is the new “Send in the Clowns,” don’t you know. That is to say, it’s apparently adaptable to the plot of any Broadway show, because in addition to being Priscilla‘s emotional fulcrum, it was also shoehorned into last season’s Promises Promises. In that show, it was Kristen Chenoweth’s semi-lament for a man. In this, it’s sung by the lead character about his faraway young son. It’s a testament to the song’s lasting greatness that it seems to work everywhere, or at least that everyone thinks it does.

    “Thank God, I’m a Country Boy”
    This song didn’t technically appear in it, but John Denver has already a musical all to himself. Almost Heaven played off-Broadway in 2005, and worked mostly as a review of Denver’s songs, and not a chronicle of his life. In Priscilla, the song works as a way to introduce the audience to a bunch of Australians who… channel the rural aesthetic. Or something. Not the original intention? Meh. John Denver was pretty chill. We don’t think he’d mind.

    “Boogie Wonderland”
    This Earth, Wind and Fire tuner was already on Broadway once… in one of the biggest flops of all time. The jukebox musical Hot Feet (not to be confused with the movie Happy Feet, which also contained this song, and is apparently about penguins) opened in 2006 and closed like ten seconds later. And although there’s no telling what it’ll do on Broadway, Priscilla is already a global hit. So we think this song’s theatrical karma is already solidly restored.

    photo: http://www.priscillaonbroadway.com/

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    Q&A: Caught in the Act With… Tony Vincent

    Tony Vincent made a splash in 2010, originating the role of the sinister-yet-seductive St. Jimmy in American Idiot. But long before that, he was a chart-topping solo artist . We recently chatted with him about his high-profile successor, vino, performing Andrew Lloyd Webber in China, and his current project—a return to his rockstar roots—among other things. Here’s what he had to say.

    So, you’re working on some new music? What’s it sounding like these days? Can you give us an idea?

    When I left American Idiot at the end of the year, I was solely going to be writing for myself, as a solo artist, because that’s what I’ve done from the beginning. But over the last month and a half, an old mate of mine, who was in a band called DC Talk [Kevin Max], was like, ‘What would you think about getting together and putting a band together?’ He wanted me to be a part of Bad Omens, which is what the band is called.

    We’re massive Britpop freaks. I’m massively influenced by Tears for Fears and Duran Duran and Depeche Mode and The Cure. And it’ll probably nod back to those anthemic melodies, but slightly in a more aggressive way. But definitely within the pop realm.

    Back to American Idiot for a sec. How did the role come to you?

    I got a call from my agent. The had gone through two workshops of the project and weren’t happy with who they had cast in the St. Jimmy role, or they at least felt that it wasn’t right. It was only three weeks before we went to rehearsal at Berkley, and they just didn’t know what they wanted. Was this Johnny’s alter ego? That was the intent in the first place, but was it more than that? Was there going to be this sort of threesome kind of thing between Johnny and Whatshername? We didn’t know, and Michael Mayer at that time didn’t know. So we were videoed and the tapes would be send up to Billie Joe and he’d be part of the casting process.

    So you weren’t face-to-face with Green Day during the actual auditions.

    No, because the whole band was on the road at the time. So we’d have auditions. They’d all be captured on video, and then sent to Billie Joe to look at them on his own time. It seemed like a very long week-and-a-half.

    What was your awareness level of Green Day before you auditioned for the show?

    I knew American Idiot because a friend of mine worked radio promotions at Reprise Records, so she gave me a prerelease copy of it. I couldn’t get past “Boulevard of Broken Dreams,” and it moved me amazingly. But I don’t think I listened to the record front to back once. This was four years before. Little did I know that we’d be working with the guys pretty closely.

    So when you first listened to it, you weren’t really thinking of it as a character or a piece that would be onstage.

    Oh, no. I was just thinking that these were fucking great rock songs, but that’s all I could think of. At the time, I didn’t know who St. Jimmy was. I don’t even think I knew the song.

    And I’m always very skeptical about bands who try to put their work onstage because, for the most part, Broadway has actors who can sing, and not musicians. So that first time when I was pitched the option to go and audition for it, I was like, really? I don’t know. And then I read the character breakdown and I was like, OK I’m definitely giving this a shot.

    How’s your hair these days? Did you consider keeping the pseudo-mowhawk?

    Yeah, actually. It wasn’t until two and a half weeks ago that I actually shaved my head. I wanted to try to keep it as long as I could but you know what? It’s great, and it was a signature for the character, but it was the one thing that was kind of holding me back from moving away from American Idiot. And it was just something that I felt that I needed to do.

    What was it like passing the torch to Billie Joe after you left?

    You mean, Billie Joe being my understudy? [Laughs.] You know, it was such a vocally intense show, when you consider Berkley and the New York version. We knew that there was an opportunity that he would come in to the role again. We all kind of came to the table, and I was like, this is the opportunity for me to bow out graciously, and pass the baton to the guy who wrote the role. And it gives me a chance to start refocusing on the next step in my career.

    So, because you’ve worked so often in London, I kind of got it in my head that you’re English. Do you have any English heritage or did I just make that up?

    You didn’t make it up. My mother comes from an English background, and my father is Italian, however I’ve been so influenced by the Beatles since I was four years old. I heard a record by them and I knew that music was what I wanted to do with my life. That’s why I’m such a Britpop freak. I’m big time Anglophile. Plus, I spent a lot of time in London via We Will Rock You, and working on a record for Sony. I think I spent a solid 9 months to a year and a half over there.

    Also, you’ve worked extensively with Andrew Lloyd Webber.

    I had done Superstar, the movie, and we recorded that in London at a place called Pinewood Studios, which is where they filmed all the old James Bond, so there was some pretty cool heritage. And I came back to the states to open it on Broadway. It was an absolutely extravagant opening night. I can’t even tell you how many hundreds of thousands of dollars that were spent on it. They basically had floating women dressed in angel costumes hanging from the ceiling all night long. It was totally over the top and amazing.

    And then you went to China with one of his projects too, right?

    Yeah, there was a group in Australia that wanted to break boundaries and allow his music to be experienced in Asia and specifically in China. They initially wanted to present this massive medley of his material with some celebrities, including some Chinese celebrities, then they could maybe bring Cats over there or something else. So it was a huge concert-type of situation.

    It was something that I really loved because it was strictly music. It was really an amazing experience, and it was cool because my sister flew over and we got a chance to go to a very rural area near the Great Wall. It was a major highlight of mine. You can’t really realize its massiveness of it until you see it looping over the hills and mountains. It looked like chaos but was spectacular.

    What was your hometown like, and did you like growing up there?

    I grew up in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and I loved growing up there. It’s an amazingly spiritual place for me, but it’s also a great place to grow up in the theater. I went to to high school with Neil Patrick Harris, and he and I acted frequently opposite each other. We graduated in the same class, and Freddie Prinze Jr. went there as well. It was a brand new high school at the time, and it was chosen as one of the top 10 public schools in the country. We did this massive student exchange with the Soviet Union, and that was the first time anything like that had happened. It was a really amazing place to grow up.

    Words that you use too often:

    Brilliant. But that’s because I’m an Anglophile, and because I think that the more times I say it, the more I’m English. I say “mate.” I call a lot of American things by English-isms.

    Words that you don’t use often enough:

    More three- and four-syllable words.

    What’s the last book that you read?

    I’m reading a book called Liquid Memory by the director who did Mondovino [Jonathan Nossiter], which is a wine documentary in France. His writing is absolutely glorious, especially if you’re a lover of wine. He writes in such a poetic way. I can’t speak to it enough, because if I wasn’t doing entertainment, I’d be in the wine business. I actually left entertainment for about two and a half years and enrolled in wine school full time and became a sommelier. It’s something that I have a lot of connection to.

    Recommend one (relatively affordable) bottle of wine that we should all go out and get right now.

    That is a impossible question to answer! Everybody has such a different palate, and what I think is an amazing bottle of wine, someone else may not.

    But, OK. If you like white wine, I would seek out Merry Edwards. Any of her wines are just beautiful. Another good producer is Robert Biale. Their signature bottle of zinfandel is called Black Chicken. It’s a great bottle of wine.

    What other bad guy would you like to play, from any realm?

    If they ever do a version of Reservoir Dogs onstage, I think that movie is brilliant. I don’t know if you could do it onstage, but there’s a role in that that I’d love to play. I don’t know which character it is because they all have so many different dimensions to them.

    Favorite mid-late 90s pop song:

    I think “Sewing the Seeds of Love” came in the early 90s?

    Yeah, that’s a little early.

    OK. “Home” by Depeche Mode.

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    unf.

    Remember that time Gavin Creel was the only person who didn’t get naked in Hair? And you were really upset because you know he’s a hottie with a body?

    Well, in his new gig up at ART, Prometheus Bound, he’s clearly trying to make up for that past injustice because he spends the entire show as #shirtlessgavincreel (to steal from our favorite Linda). And he looks good.

    In fact, our words cannot do the pictures justice. So we’re going to be uncharacteristically quiet and let you enjoy them.

    Please tell me they kiss.

    Photos: Marcus Stern

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    See that guy up there? His name is Damon McToy, and he’s going to be a big star. We’re calling it here first, y’all (you know how we like to be the first ones to do that).

    McToy won a YouTube competition to perform in Monday night’s NewMusicalTheatre.com concert at The Canal Room and his performance of Pasek and Paul’s “Monticello” brought the house down. Seriously. It was an amazing moment to witness, not in the least because it was so unexpected.

    Sure, the contest was a cool idea. A fun way to celebrate what NMT.com is about. But did anyone expect it to produce the most electric performance of the night? Hardly. Then McToy took the stage and put everyone around him to shame.

    “Monticello” is about every performer’s dream—leaving their small town behind to become a big star. It was the perfect song choice and the perfect performance. McToy lived it out, right there on that stage. Perhaps best of all, he reminded us why we love musical theater so much in the first place, and made us so glad there are people out there still writing it, producing it, performing it every day.

    Video: NewMusicalTheatre.com, Filmed by Shoshana Feinstein

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