Let’s Mock-n-Roll
(l. to r.) Sean Fleming, Todd Cooper, Allen Cruz |
Carly Ameling, Sean Fleming |
Sean Fleming |
By Tom Wachunas
“I
don’t know where I’m going / But I sure know where I’ve been / Hanging on the
promises / in songs of yesterday …”
lyrics from “Here I Go Again,” By David Coverdale and Bernie Marsden, of
Whitesnake
Here they go again.
They’ve been waiting for a show like this – to hit us with their best shot and
fire away. They just couldn’t fight the feeling to feel the noize. Workin’ hard
to get their fill, they all want a thrill and they don’t stop believin’. The
final countdown to nothin’ but a good time and high energy is on. They wanna
rock. They’re the ones who want to be with you with too much time on their
hands, to kiss you deadly, and to melt your face in the heat of the moment with
more than words. Yikes.
The
‘they’ is Players Guild Theatre’s Jonathan Tisevich, directing Rock of Ages, with a scalding-hot cast
of 14 performers, and an equally sizzling onstage six-piece band conducted by
keyboardist Steve Parsons. The show is a jukebox musical, written by Chris
D'Arienzo with music arrangements and orchestrations by Ethan Popp, constructed
around famous “glam metal” hits of the 1980s, with snippets of more than 30 power
ballads and gushy love songs woven into the action. The original Broadway production
opened in 2009 and ran for 2,328 performances before closing in 2015.
An insanely twisted
tale set in 1987, Rock of Ages is
about life and love in and around The Bourbon Room, a Sunset Strip rock club on
the verge of being torn down to make room for retail stores. We hear from
screeching, big-haired, crotch-grinding men and watch slinky parades of
pole-dancing, derriere-wagging waitresses clad in neon-colored lingerie
(costumes by Suwatana Rockland). If you look closely enough behind this
elaborately constructed bar room façade (scenic design by Joshua Erichsen),
however, you’re sure to find that much of the show is a deeply probing metaphor
for… screeching, big-haired, crotch-grinding men and pole-dancing, derriere-wagging
waitresses clad in neon-colored lingerie.
The story is
narrated by the infectiously goofy and mischievous Allen Cruz. He plays Lonny,
the Bourdon Room house manager and sound man who has a noisy habit of disrupting
the small number of genuinely tender moments the show has to offer. Most of
those moments center on Carly Ameling - instantly charismatic and shining in her
portrayal of Sherrie, the proverbial small-town girl who comes to L.A. to be an
actress but reluctantly settles for doing lap dances – and Sean Fleming in his
role of Drew, an aspiring rock singer whose high-range vocals could peel paint.
Their could-be romance is sidetracked when Sherrie succumbs to the sexual
prowess of the hopelessly self-absorbed, swaggering bad- boy megastar Stacee
Jaxx, played with lascivious ferocity by Brandon Michael. Talk about breaching
the fourth wall - as very much of the action does in this sprawling production
- at one point he slingshots a pair of panties into the audience.
There’s something of the mellowed hippie peeking
through Todd Cooper’s portrayal of Dennis, the Bourbon Room owner who decides
to mentor Drew in his efforts to be a successful rocker. Paralleling Cooper’s
magnetism is that of Leiah Lewis in her role of Justice, owner of the strip
joint that hires Sherrie. And then
there’s Morgan Brown as Regina (pronounced RegEYEna, she’s oh so careful to
point out), an impish gadfly protesting the impending destruction of the
Bourbon Room by greedy German mother and son developers, Hertz und Franz,
played with chillingly cartoonish intensity by Hannah Kyriakides and Dylan
Berkshire.
Through it all is the titillating choreography
by Brandon Leffler – a raucous mash-up of apparent spontaneity and studied
stereotypes that leave few visual clichés unexplored, including some absolutely
hilarious scenes that imitate classic cinematic slow-motion effects to
exaggerate if not dismiss the kitschy sentimentality of the moment.
So the show is a
lurid yet not overly- loud caricature. On one level it’s a silly burlesque, an unapologetic
parody, and an otherwise self-mocking Declaration of Dependence on Dopamine. Interestingly
enough, the cast members seem to have made a serious business out of not taking
this business of sex and drugs and rock-n-roll too seriously. Maybe you could
think of them as Journey’s streetlights people, aboard a midnight train, this
one headed to where the laughs go on and on and on…
PHOTOS by Dominic Iudiciani
Rock of Ages / Through Sept.
1, 2019, at 8 p.m. Friday and
Saturday, and 2 p.m. Sunday / no show on Aug. 10, and shows at 7 and 11 p.m. on
Aug. 31 / at Players Guild Theatre Downstage, Cultural Center for the Arts,
1001 Market Ave. N, Canton, Ohio / TICKETS: $34 ($31 for seniors 65 and older),
may be ordered at www.PlayersGuildTheatre.com and 330-453-7619.
No comments:
Post a Comment