Stay in the Loop
BSR publishes on a weekly schedule, with an email newsletter every Wednesday and Thursday morning. There’s no paywall, and subscribing is always free.
More than the sum of its parts
‘Newsies’ at the Academy of Music
Harvey Fierstein’s book for Newsies is adapted from a movie based on a true story from 1899, when newspaper boys were the main distributors of papers to the public. A two-week strike forced changes in the way they were paid by publishers like Joseph Pulitzer. If that plot doesn’t pull at your heartstrings, Newsies adds a romance between the uneducated, feisty strike leader, played by Dan DeLuca, and a newspaper columnist who turns out to be Pulitzer’s daughter, played by Stephanie Styles.
The set is a series of nine huge metallic boxes, stacked in groups of three, which represent the skyscrapers, tenement buildings, and elevated train platforms of New York City. They spin around and move forward and back. With scrims descending in front of them, they display projections of newspapers, illustrations of typesetting, and even indoor settings.
The show relies on ensemble more than individual players, so it doesn’t much matter that this touring cast lacks the charisma of the Broadway company. Christopher Gattelli’s choreography projects the masculinity and physicality of tough street kids, full of splits, backflips and handsprings in rousing numbers like “King of New York” and “Seize the Day.”
Alan Menken’s melodious score focuses on high-energy music without delivering a standout romantic ballad. “Something to Believe In,” the lovely Act II duet, fails to reach the emotional level of songs Menken wrote for Aladdin or The Little Mermaid. Menken and Feldman recently added a wistful song for a crippled boy confined in a refuge for wayward youths, “Letter from the Refuge,” which received its first performance in Philadelphia.
With its plucky poor kids fighting against wealthy entrenched power (the unabashedly pro-union script portrays cops as brutal enforcers for the employers), you might find the plot heavy-handed. But with its athletic dancing and spectacular set design, Newsies nevertheless provides an exciting theater experience. I left the theater smiling about this feel-good tale.
For a review by Naomi Orwin, click here.
What, When, Where
Newsies. Book by Harvey Fierstein; music by Alan Menken and lyrics by Jack Feldman; Jeff Calhoun directed; Christopher Gattelli, choreographer. Adapted from the 1992 film Newsies, screenplay by Bob Tzudiker and Noni White. Through November 2, 2014 at Academy of Music, Broad and Locust Sts., Philadelphia. 215-731-3333 or www.kimmelcenter.org/broadway.
Sign up for our newsletter
All of the week's new articles, all in one place. Sign up for the free weekly BSR newsletters, and don't miss a conversation.