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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=94TT0293>
<title>
Mar. 14, 1994: The Arts & Media:Theater
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Mar. 14, 1994 How Man Began
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 96
Theater
Damn Yankees Is Back At Bat
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Centenarian George Abbott's revival with attitude makes a '50s
baseball musical one for the ages
</p>
<p>By William A. Henry III
</p>
<p> When George Abbott unveiled his baseball musical Damn Yankees
on Broadway in May 1955, a month before his 68th birthday, he
almost certainly didn't expect to attend opening night of a
revival nearly 39 years later. He surely didn't expect to be
106 and actively supervising revisions to his libretto about
a middle-aged man who sells his soul to the devil for one glorious
season as a long-ball hitter. But Abbott was more than a ceremonial
presence at last week's gala. He was in the audience for previews
night after night--taking notes. Since well before the revival
began tryouts in San Diego last autumn, Abbott has debated jokes
and period references, wrestled with changing mores between
the sexes and tinkered with the staging, including an explosion
for the first-act finale, when a frustrated devil punishes his
temptress-assistant. Says Jack O'Brien, who directed the revival
and revamped the book with Abbott: "He is absolutely astonishing
on structure. When he suggested blowing up Lola, I thought we
hadn't built up to it. A while later, he suggested it again
and said, `It'll get a big laugh.' It does."
</p>
<p> The new Yankees is Abbott's 125th career production as writer,
director, producer or actor. Erstwhile protege Harold Prince,
66, whose first big shows as a producer were Abbott's Pajama
Game and the original Yankees, wasn't yet born when Abbott burst
to writing fame in 1925 with the melodrama Broadway and the
comedy Three Men on a Horse. (Both have been revived on Broadway
in recent years, the former in a staging by Abbott himself.)
Prince recalls asking Abbott a couple of years ago what became
of a play he was writing: "He told me it wasn't working out,
so he set it aside for a year and figured he'd get back to it--and he was 104!"
</p>
<p> Yankees seems the least revivable of musicals, inextricably
rooted in a bygone era when the Washington Senators played baseball
and the New York Yankees reigned supreme. Its household references
are just as dated: wives no longer suffer quite so silently
while husbands sit in easy chairs drinking beer and watching
baseball on TV. Yet with surprisingly little nipping and tucking,
the show works. Its theme--that glory matters less than love--is universal, at least among plots of musicals.
</p>
<p> O'Brien and Abbott have cunningly updated without updating.
Like the creators of the long-running current revival of Guys
and Dolls, they have kept the show in period but with attitude--sardonically exaggerated sets, saturated colors, a heightened
performing style that lets audiences feel it's O.K. to be a
little distant from the world of the play. Period references
have been added, many with a snide edge not found in the original.
The devil says he's been busy designing an Edsel, the Ford fiasco
that went onto the market two years after the show first opened.
When he envisions a gallery of great lovers through history,
he mentions FBI director J. Edgar Hoover, a sacred cow when
the original show opened, and Hoover's companion and heir Clyde
Tolson.
</p>
<p> The score proves richer than its reputation, which is based
on just two songs, (You Gotta Have) Heart and Whatever Lola
Wants (Lola Gets). Choreographer Rob Marshall shrewdly quotes
Bob Fosse's slithery, nonpareil work for the original, especially
the signature dances, the ballfield Blooper Ballet and the mambo
Who's Got the Pain? The men in the cast are consistently terrific,
from lead dancer Scott Wise, who in show after show proves chorus
boys can rival stars, to Broadway newcomer Dennis Kelly as the
sagging middle-aged man and Jarrod Emick, recently the umpteenth
replacement in Miss Saigon, as the hunky young ballplayer he
turns into. In the juicy part of the devil, Victor Garber is
hilariously fey, evoking his TV portrayal of Liberace. If the
first act is sometimes draggy, the second is a jubilant succession
of boffo big numbers, especially a dreamscape trio among Kelly,
Emick and Linda Stephens, also making a stunning Broadway debut,
as the baffled wife he/they left behind.
</p>
<p> The one shortcoming is the marquee name, Bebe Neuwirth, Lilith
in TV's Cheers. As sultry, satanly Lola, she performs competently
but utterly lacks magic--nothing is supernatural, nothing
ethereal, not much even sexy in a role that made Gwen Verdon
a megastar. Yet even with too little vamp and too much camp,
this Damn Yankees is damn good. Let's hope Abbott is around
in 2033 to update it again.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>