The Wilmington Drama League’s The Chrysalis Players (the
League’s youth program) has brought Birdie back! Most people know the
story of Bye Bye Birdie (BBB). BBB has been a popular musical for both
high schools and community theater companies to produce since the 60s. However,
for the few who haven’t appeared in it or haven’t seen a stage production or a
film adaptation, the BBB’s story is very basic and a little outdated. But, it’s
a perfect show for young adults to explore and stage.
Set in the late 1950s, Conrad Birdie (Jeff Gorcyca) , an
Elvis Presley-like signer, is being drafted to fight in the war. Birdie’s New
York agent/songwriter Albert Peterson (Adam J. Wahlberg) is convinced by his
secretary and sometime girlfriend, Rose Alvarez (Ashley Butler), to give up the
music business, go to college and become an English teacher. Before he’s able
to give up his family’s music business, Almaelou, he must make $50,000 to
afford his tuition and his new life in academia. Rose comes up a genius idea;
Albert will write a song for Birdie, “One Last Kiss,” to not only
perform on television, but to also serenade one of his lucky female fans - 15
year-old Kim MacAfee (Erin Foltz) of Sweet Apple, Ohio - and give her his “last
kiss” before the whole nation. Of course this plan will propel the song into
the hit-making stratosphere; making enough money for Albert to enter the next
chapter of his life – husband and English teacher. Albert, Rose, Birdie, and
Mae (Laurene Eckbold), Albert’s overbearing mother who despises the thought of
Albert dissolving the family business and marrying Rose, travel to Kim’s
hometown where comic mayhem ensues.
BBB is as American as apple pie and baseball. The show
features some of the most identifiable Broadway tunes including, “The Telephone
Hour” and “A Lot of Livin’ to Do.” It’s hard not to get sucked into Charles
Strouse and Lee Adams’ playful score, as well as the love story between Albert
and Rose and Kim and her jealous steady, Hugo Peabody (Jameson May); even if
it’s the standard fair – boy meets girl, boy loses girl, boy gets girl at the
end.
Tina Sheing’s boisterous production boasts enthusiastic
performances by its young cast. Mr. Wahlberg (one of the few adults) is a
standout as Albert. His sinuous body is perfect for the slapstick-physical
humor required for the part (Dick Van Dyke originated the role in the Broadway
production). He’s also a fantastic singer with great charisma. I particularly
loved his scenes with Eckbold. They have perfectly captured the relationship
between a mother who “can’t cut the apron strings” and a son who’s not sure if
he’s ready to have them “clipped!”
Tommy Fisher’s inspired choreography keeps the large
cast in step with the popular dances of the period. At times I thought some of
the audience members were going to jump up and dance with the actors!
Bye Bye Birdie runs through June 24th. For information and tickets, visit www.wilmingtondramaleague.org
or call 302.764.3396.
This review simply cannot be for the production of Bye Bye Birdie that is now at the Wilmington Drama League. If I didn't believe in supporting community theater, I would've walked out during the first act and asked for my money back. It is highly unwatchable.
ReplyDeleteCharles, you didn't actually go to this show, did you? It really hurts the credibility of a reviewer to so thoroughly mischaracterize a show in this way. As the preview commenter said, this production was very hard to watch.
ReplyDeleteWhat a shame that you two are complaining about a bunch of kids having fun and doing what they love on stage! Shame on you two! This was a community show with many levels of talent. It's not Broadway. If you didn't like it, that's fine, but my goodness, there is no need to be so rude!
ReplyDeleteThe shame is that there seemed to be talented folks in the cast and everyone seemed to really work hard, but the show still fell apart. Why? Poor direction and poor casting. I've seen plenty of WDL musicals that were excellent. Parade. Chicago. Willy Wonka. The Producers. Urinetown. Assasins. Rent. Big River. Oliver. The Sound of Music. The list goes on. But Bye Bye Birdie wasn't good. It just didn't hold together despite the hard work and dedication of the performers. That's the shame.
ReplyDeleteUrinetown lol he could of picked a better production but props to the music director of Chicago! Yeah Chris!
ReplyDelete