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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT1202>
<title>
Mar. 15, 1993: Reviews:Theater
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 15, 1993 In the Name of God
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
REVIEWS, Page 69
THEATER
A Mishmash Of a Musical
</hdr>
<body>
<p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
</p>
<qt>
<l>TITLE: The Goodbye Girl</l>
<l>AUTHORS: Music by Marvin Hamlisch; Lyrics by David Zippel; Book by Neil Simon</l>
<l>WHERE: Broadway</l>
</qt>
<p> THE BOTTOM LINE: Big stars, boffo story, but bad judgments
turn a much anticipated show into an amiable disappointment.
</p>
<p> A Broadway adage holds that there are 50 ways for a musical
to go wrong and only one for it to go right. No musical this
season was more eagerly awaited than The Goodbye Girl, Neil
Simon's adaptation of his 1977 hit movie about the bumpily
blossoming romance between a single mother and a quirky actor
forced to share an apartment and a succession of setbacks.
Adding to the buzz were Simon's collaborators: Marvin Hamlisch,
composer of Broadway's longest-running show ever, A Chorus
Line, and David Zippel, whose lyrics for City of Angels were
the wittiest in years. Graciela Daniele, a six-time Tony
nominee, was recruited to mount musical numbers. The leads were
cast with Bernadette Peters, the reigning diva of musicals, and
Martin Short, an effervescent TV and film comic making his
Broadway debut. So potent was the combination that a year in
advance, industry leaders pegged the show to sweep the Tonys.
</p>
<p> Alas, The Goodbye Girl went wrong in at least four of those
50 ways. What arrived on Broadway last week is earnest,
serviceable yet rarely stirring and almost never believable.
It's never outright bad, it's occasionally funny, and twice--when Peters sings the self-help anthem How Can I Win? and when
Short courts her on a rooftop--it's thrilling. But most of
the craftsmanship is humdrum. The narrative lacks suspense and
liberating flights of fancy. The production has no style, no
look, no distinctive flavor or texture or sound. And it
constantly brings to mind better shows: a transvestite Richard
III pales beside the Crummles troupe in Nicholas Nickleby;
dancers costumed as forbidden foods on a TV diet show feebly
echo the You Gotta Have a Gimmick number from Gypsy.
</p>
<p> The first big mistake was failing to settle on a place and
time. The front curtain's stylized glimpse of Manhattan evokes
the '40s-ish nostalgia of Guys and Dolls, while the main set, a
dark framework strewn with irregular cutout boxes of vivid
color, recalls the '60s--and, more precisely, Simon's musical
hit Sweet Charity. A carousel-like jungle gym in Day-Glo tones
suggests the '70s, as do the male lead's fixations on
meditation and macrobiotics. The sexual precocity of the female
lead's 12-year-old daughter feels contemporary. Yet the sonorous
music and often sentimental lyrics seem straight from the '50s.
This mishmash makes it harder to swallow the contrived
meet-cute start and melodramatic career twists of the plot.
</p>
<p> The second mistake was to have Peters, so good at winsome
vulnerability, play a character so hard and snarly. From the
opening number, in which she rages at being abandoned by a
live-in boyfriend, to the contrived quarrel with her new
paramour a few moments before the finale, her angst always
outshouts her charm. A third goof was to have Short start out
really neurotic, as Richard Dreyfuss was in his Oscar-winning
film portrayal, but turn into Caspar Milquetoast (or Ed
Grimley) within minutes. The domestic frictions that made the
film funny simply disappear.
</p>
<p> The biggest goof of all was ousting character-conscious
director Gene Saks during tryouts in favor of Michael Kidd, 73, a
legend who has had scant impact on the Great White Way for a
couple of decades. The politest thing one can say about Kidd's
slack, scattershot staging of The Goodbye Girl is that it will
do nothing to revive his bygone career.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>