RECOMMENDED
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers
book by Lawrence Kasha and David Landay
lyrics by Johnny Mercer
music by Gene de Paul
new songs by Al Kasha and Joel Hirschhorn (written for the 1982 stage tour & Broadway version)
directed by Robert Marra
choreographed by Lee Martino
Glendale Centre Theatre
through November 19
I cannot stress how much choreography means to this show. Light on plot and characters, there's corny humor a plenty, but that alone does not sustain a show for two hours. Throw in some acrobatic dancing, and you become so riveted, you forget all else. Like Michael Kidd in the film, Lee Martino expects a great deal from her actors, and considering she only had two weeks rehearsal with the cast, she worked wonders. She worked their butts off is the perfect phrase suiting the lingo of the farming Pontipees in 1850s Oregon. Marra's staging in the round gives the boys and girls plenty of running around to do up and down aisles as well as into nooks and crannies of the actual stage itself. With all of the movement added and the cast responding with close to clockwork precision, they succeed in putting on a show.
Jason W. Webb (Adam) and Jennifer J. Webb (Milly), real life husband and wife, make a dynamic duo and lead a wonderful cast. Andrew Allen, Andrew Blake Ames, Fernando Duran, Brandon Heitkamp, Paul Reid and Grant Jordan - a little dynamo as dancer and singer - are the innocent, unkempt, sans manners but lovable brothers. Holly Childers, Emily Coddington, Ashley Mackel, Caroline Montes, Lindsey Rei and Libby Snyder - the purdy brides. Suitors opposing the brothers include: John Paul Batista, Genaro Gutierrez, Robert Hartson, Kevin Holmquist, Raymond Matsumara and Steven Weber. General store owners Osa Danam and Korey Simeone and preacher Don Woodruff complete the big, brassy, affable ensemble.
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers is what it is, nothing more, nothing less: a genuinely entertaining slice of Americana that is bound to make you smile. I'm still humming "Goin' Courtin'" and "Wonderful, Wonderful Day". Glendale Centre Theatre is once again successful this year in mounting a musical with a big cast - also this summer's hit 1776 - pulling it off in grande style.
4 out of 5 stars



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