MAMA, I like the big one in PINK!
Dec. 8th, 2004 10:01 pmThe companies of “Evita” and the ”Radio City Christmas Spectacular” did a ticket swap this week with RSSC cast members seeing our show last evening and 25 of us attending their show this afternoon. One of the companies of the Rockettes’ Christmas show is performing here at the historic Fox Theater in Detroit. For me, seeing the theater itself was the best part of attending the matinee.
The Fox interior is spectacular. The theatre holds 5,000 patrons and this particular Fox (the others being in St Louis and Atlanta) has been breathtakingly renovated. The members of the “Evita” cast who attended today took up two center rows, eleven and twelve rows back. The show lived up to its billing as a “Spectacular”, with elaborate sets and costumes, 18 beautiful Rockettes, a little girl and little boy soloists, a singing and dancing chorus of 18, Santa, Mrs. Santa, four Little People as Elves, five sheep and three immense camels. There were no cows in sight:)
The numbers were well-performed and the mix of Santa and a Live Nativity seemed to push the right buttons with the audience. I enjoyed the big production numbers, the precision tapping and high kicks and especially the Fox Theater’s resident organist who certainly put all of us in the Christmas mood. The downside is that all of the music was pre-recorded as were most of the ensemble vocals and the tap sounds of the dancers. Am I a Scrooge to want “live entertainment” to mean everything is being performed live? I would have been disappointed in the recorded elements of the performance if I had paid to attend. Only Santa and Mrs Claus actually peformed noticeably live vocals.
My favorite numbers in the show were: a "Nutcracker" sequence featuring “dancing bears” (my nick-name from college:); "Carol of the Bells", an ethereal silver, gold and white dance pastiche resplendent with sleighs. It contained a really nice classical solo by one of the male dancers; and the toy soldiers number where the Rockettes, as wooden soldiers, fall like dominoes. A four-year old boy seated three rows behind me yelled out as the bears were dancing around the stage...”Mama, I like the big one in Pink”. Later on when the Live Nativity scene sledge-hammered the “true message of Christmas” home, this same kid yelled, “I don’t like this. Make it stop!” I think there might be a “pink” team member in the making. He certainly had good taste in choosing the material he liked.
It was a fun afternoon out... a welcome respite from our show’s cynical political message... its dark history lesson. However, it did make me appreciate our show a lot more. I don't think I could smile through 14 shows a week, singing and dancing to a click track:) Interestingly enough, Santa ad-libbed “Christian Dior” me during one of his scenes, which had us hooting at the reference to our show. At the same time, it did hit home that Jesus and Eva Peron both died at the age of 33. A coincidence? I think not! HA!
The Fox interior is spectacular. The theatre holds 5,000 patrons and this particular Fox (the others being in St Louis and Atlanta) has been breathtakingly renovated. The members of the “Evita” cast who attended today took up two center rows, eleven and twelve rows back. The show lived up to its billing as a “Spectacular”, with elaborate sets and costumes, 18 beautiful Rockettes, a little girl and little boy soloists, a singing and dancing chorus of 18, Santa, Mrs. Santa, four Little People as Elves, five sheep and three immense camels. There were no cows in sight:)
The numbers were well-performed and the mix of Santa and a Live Nativity seemed to push the right buttons with the audience. I enjoyed the big production numbers, the precision tapping and high kicks and especially the Fox Theater’s resident organist who certainly put all of us in the Christmas mood. The downside is that all of the music was pre-recorded as were most of the ensemble vocals and the tap sounds of the dancers. Am I a Scrooge to want “live entertainment” to mean everything is being performed live? I would have been disappointed in the recorded elements of the performance if I had paid to attend. Only Santa and Mrs Claus actually peformed noticeably live vocals.
My favorite numbers in the show were: a "Nutcracker" sequence featuring “dancing bears” (my nick-name from college:); "Carol of the Bells", an ethereal silver, gold and white dance pastiche resplendent with sleighs. It contained a really nice classical solo by one of the male dancers; and the toy soldiers number where the Rockettes, as wooden soldiers, fall like dominoes. A four-year old boy seated three rows behind me yelled out as the bears were dancing around the stage...”Mama, I like the big one in Pink”. Later on when the Live Nativity scene sledge-hammered the “true message of Christmas” home, this same kid yelled, “I don’t like this. Make it stop!” I think there might be a “pink” team member in the making. He certainly had good taste in choosing the material he liked.
It was a fun afternoon out... a welcome respite from our show’s cynical political message... its dark history lesson. However, it did make me appreciate our show a lot more. I don't think I could smile through 14 shows a week, singing and dancing to a click track:) Interestingly enough, Santa ad-libbed “Christian Dior” me during one of his scenes, which had us hooting at the reference to our show. At the same time, it did hit home that Jesus and Eva Peron both died at the age of 33. A coincidence? I think not! HA!