Based on As You Like It by William Shakespeare, Adapted by Jane McClelland and Mike Petersen, Directed by Ken MacDougall,
Runs until Apr. 21 2011
Review based on 1st Preview performance.
i think i can - Lorraine Kimsa Theatre for Young People - Toronto, ON - **** (out of 5 stars)
Co-Created by Florence Gibson and Shawn Byfield, Directed by Conrad Alexandrowicz
Runs until May 5th 2011
Songs For a New World - Angelwalk Theatre at Studio Theatre in the Toronto Centre for the Arts - Toronto, ON - ****1/2 (out of 5 stars)
Music & Lyrics by Jason Robert Brown, Directed by Andrew Lamb
Runs until Apr. 23 2011
Review based on 1st Preview performance.
Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark - Foxwood Theatre - Broadway, New York, NY - ** (out of 5 stars)
Music and Lyrics by Bono and The Edge, Book by Julie Taymor and Glen Berger, Directed by Julie Taymor
Review based on 46th Preview performance (or something like that), Runs until Apr. 18th, re-starts May 23rd. Opens June 14th 2011, or so they say for now.


The joys in watching adorable stuffed animals sprouting Shakesperean verse is half the laugh in itself, but with enthusiastic performances from Petersen and McClelland that keep each of the many characters distinct, As You Like It has never been easier to understand (and it is not an easy play to follow. In fact, when I saw last year's terrific production at Stratford, I have to admit that I thought back to As You Puppet to keep all the characters in check, and matching each actor to the animal performance from this show!). Petersen and McClelland are so good at manipulating the characters, that AGAIN, I ended up watching only the stuffed animals as if they were truly the actors (even though the puppeteers are in full view, each voicing multiple characters and changing over the sets).



Tangara Jones (as Frufie) is adorably amusing as the girl with thick glasses trying to be a cheerleader, and who makes a special bond with Tip, and Sutherland and Jones' maintain their characters' traits within their dancing.
Songs For a New World is one of Jason Robert Brown's earlier works, but you can definitely tell that it's a pre-curser to his terrific later Broadway shows Parade and the underrated 13. The show doesn't really have a typical musical storyline, but is more of a collection of songs, each telling a short story, all adhering to a central idea of lives either starting anew, yearning for change, or other themes on people living in the city.


Denise Oucharek has an equally lovely voice, but she especially excels in adding a comedic touch to her roles. With only one song to define each "character's" story, Oucharek hilariously gives a full plot within her single song journeys.

It's a testament to Brown's music and Andrew Lamb's (My Mother's Lesbian Jewish-Wiccan Wedding) that a show of such simplicity can be so thrilling and exciting. I left with a beaming smile on my face, and I only wished the show were longer so that I could hear Peck and Bott sing some more.
In another show with puppetry, director Julie Taymor pulls the strings on the poor hard working cast who are thrown around the Foxwood Theatre to present Spider-Man: Turn Off The Dark, which is as bad as you have heard.

Don't get me wrong, I actually believe a musical about Spider-Man can actually work, but this isn't it, and Taymor's attempt to meld in an artistic element into the Spider-Man lore fails miserably while ruining the solid base the comic book hands them.

At this point, there's already word that The Geek Chorus who narrate?/create?/not really sure what the f#$k they're there for/frame the story? will be cut (because they were basically annoying (save for Gideon Glick (Spring Awakening), the only likable Geek), tedious, and who bogged down the show and had no real point), and the new character Arachne (that Julie Taymor pulled from Greek mythology and inserted it into the Spider-Man story because... well... Arachne (T.V. Carpio) is a Spider and a female, and apparently represents Taymor as an artistic myth dropped into the middle of a super-hero action show.

The action sequences are pretty dazzling and I did enjoy the fight sequences strung above the audience, and I don't mind if the show embraces its spectacle status, but it doesn't actually do it quite enough. The show tries to be both artful and action packed, which Cirque Du Soleil excels at, but being tied to a super-hero storyline, Taymor seems confused.
Reeve Carney has an ease and earthy low-key stage presence and is wonderfully likable as Peter Parker (with the rest of the Broadway male dance ensemble taking turns under Spider-Man's guise to be strung up on hire-wires) but he still gets lost within the gigantic show that surrounds him. Jennifer Damiano (Next to Normal, Spring Awakening) who showed so much potential in previous shows, is completely forgettable in an underwritten part (with no sense of plot thread logic).

Anyways, at this point, it'll (hopefully) be a brand new show come June (when it's supposed to open (so the producers say) finally) but I thought much of what we saw in January was unsalvageable unless much of the book and songs are scrapped and re-written, and while the new creative team doesn't spell much confidence, I really can't it possibly getting any worse.
It's amazing how little $65Million can buy, yet it's amazing what .01% of that budget can create. All you need is some good songs (by Jason Robert Brown), a few stuffed toys and a Shakespeare template, or some youthful tap dancers, to create a wonderfully enjoyable and memorable show.
Vance at http://tapeworthy.blogspot.com