AISLE SAY New York

KING KONG

Written by Jack Thorne
Score Composed and Produced by Marius de Viries
Songs by Eddie Perfect
Directed and Choreographed by Drew McOnie
Broadway Theatre

Reviewed by David Spencer

The ape is great. I have no problem with the ape. He is, as the animated cartoon theme song extolled, "ten times as big as a man," and manipulated by {{14}} operators, ten of them hands on, four backstage to handle the electronics, and as always when puppetry is done that well, the fact of your seeing any of the manipulation is completely irrelevant to the success of the illusion, as long as you want to believe, and who doesn’t?; it was as true of Daniel Striped Tiger, the one man hand puppet, animated and voiced by Fred Rogers.

            No, it’s the show itself that lumbers and thuds. Even when it’s energetic and sortakinda entertaining. And yes, I’ll duly explain that.

            Without going into its history, the musical King Kong is one of those thrill rides assembled by a committee of what I call— this is the family-friendly version—people who think they know stuff. Not necessarily all of them, I have zero inside track; the only thing that’s absolutely clear from the finished show is that key decisions were made by folks who don’t have a clue how a musical is constructed and don’t want to have a clue, because they live in the happy-dappy delusion that confuses craft with creakiness and tells them that if they go renegade with "creatives" all new to the musical theatre process, without training, breeding or even a sense of contextual history, they will break new ground for being untainted by the oldschool ways.

            This is exactly as misguided (the politest word I have for it) as commissioning a novel from someone who can’t punctuate, spell or express himself grammatically, just because he won’t be influenced by the literature he never studied. But you know that.

            Victimized on some level by this thinking is British librettist Jack Thorne, generally a good writer, as evidenced by his script for the Harry Potter play and a rousing fantasy-horror TV series about angels that you should totally check out, called The Fades, among other credits. But his script for KK is overburdened with nods to political correctness, especially in its portrait of central character Ann Darrow. Because the decision was made to cast her as an African American, rather than a blonde Fay Wray clone, yet also not to acknowledge her ethnicity in the text, in case an actress of different ethnicity ever assay the role. The script has to affect a neutrality about her, that both defies the social realities of the period (the 1930s) and makes conspicuous the effort to avoid admitting them. This is exacerbated by an all-but-declared feminist feistiness to her, to make sure that we’re clear that the monkey’s heartthrob is nobody’s victim…least of all the monkey’s. (There are a number of other such politically correct tells in the way other main characters are drawn and how Ann Darrow relates to them, and even in a few details of plot-revision, but let’s leave it as Ann as representative of the malady.)

            All this said, I have no more problem with the concept of making a rounded character out of Ann Darrow—nor of changing her ethnicity, nor of trying to fashion the role such that ethnicity is never a consciously acknowledged factor, to be exploited or not, as best casting may mandate—than I do with the puppet. The problem is that, as delivered, Ann Darrow is not so much that intended renovated character as she is the animated concept for renovation. She’s not a well-rounded personality, she’s a boilerplate update who ticks off all the manifesto talking points. Actress Christiani Pitts does as well with the task as anybody of considerable talent could, but filling in all those agendas to produce a credible character is an impossible assignment.

            We travel now from book to score. This is the program credit: Score Composed and Produced by Marius de Vries; Songs by Eddie Perfect. This isn’t quite the same as Glen Kelly shadow-composing harmony and accompaniment beneath the Mel Brooks melodies for a music supervisor credit. This is a corporate, pop-record-company division of labor. As such, it actually yields a bifurcated experience, because there are whole swatches of the show in which its identity as a musical per se might legitimately be in question, because there’s only power-underscoring where songs might have served better, if those songs were written by a seasoned voice or voices. As for those sections where there are songs, Eddie Perfect does what every other rock recording star does when enticed to try his hand at musical theatre: he looks for familiar signposts and then fills them with familiar tropes, without any but the most surface (if that) service paid to dramatic theme, overall musical consistency, subtext or genuine characterization. The show starts with a big company number, sung and danced to impressive scenic effects and projections, about a “City goin’ up, up, city goin’ up,” depicting New York on the architectural rise, probably meant as a precursor to Kong on the Empire State Building later. Maybe ten-to-fifteen minutes later—after Ann Darrow goes through her city montage as an actress largely ignored by casting people, to be at last conveniently lunch-counter-discovered by film director-producer Carl Denham (engagingly opportunistic Eric William Morris)—she (and we) are quickly taking the perilous journey to Skull Island, aboard a ship whose Captain (Roy Donovan in muscular voice), a minor character with no appreciable function other than exposition facilitation, who will disappear from the show not long after, is thrown the lead vocal in a steamship-movin’-fast number, and gets to sing, “Gotta keep the pressure on, keep the pressure-pressure on.” It’s not the same number. It doesn’t come off as a leitmotif. It’s just unwittingly repetitious travelogue writing. Look: We’re in New York City in the ‘30s!!! Look: We’re on a big boat to danger!!! Empty calories. And oh, heavens, let’s not even get into Ann’s eleven o’clock song to the ape. I bet you’ve already guessed it’s a generic power ballad.

            All this being true, the show is never dull, it looks fantastic and it moves along with the assurance of a bullet train (save for those few musical moments when Eddie’s imperfection goes beyond mere boilerplate function to stop it cold). You have to give director-choreographer Drew McOnie credit for that. For more than that: for epic traffic management; for a sharp, consistent eye; and for cleanly telling the story he has to tell.

            But without real musical theatre writing to support all that, what a missed opportunity.

            And what a low-yield use of a high-grade ape.


Go to David Spencer's Profile
Return to Home Page

  • Road (National) Tour Review Index
  • New York City & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • Berkshire, Massachusetts Theatre Review Index
  • Boston Area Theatre Review Index
  • Florida Theatre Review Index
  • London Theatre Review Index
  • Minneapolis/St. Paul (Twin Cities) Theatre Review Index
  • Philadelphia & Environs Theatre Review Index
  • San Francisco Bay Area Theatre Review Index
  • Seattle Area Theatre Review Index
  • Toronto, Ontario (Canada) Index