TOM TITUS -- Theater Review
When Cecil B. DeMille was making biblical screen epics a half-century
ago, he would bill them as boasting a “cast of thousands.” Scale that
down to community theater proportions and you have “Joseph and the
Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse.
There are no fewer than 33 characters populating the medium-sized
stage, often simultaneously, in this revival of an early work from the
careers of Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber. It takes the talents of four
choreographers, along with director Damien Lorton, but somehow it works,
and often it works beautifully.
Spectacle is an often-overused term, but what transpires on the Costa
Mesa stage is spectacle in spades. Flash and dash, with a magnum of
splash, punctuate this modern-dress version of the Old Testament story of
Joseph and his coat of many colors, cast out by his jealous brothers to
become a demigod in Egypt for his powers of dream interpretation.
Backed by a driving five-piece band under Lorton’s baton, “Joseph”
truly rocks. Its production numbers are mind-boggling in sheer terms of
logistics alone. That such an overflowing ensemble can mesh into a
smoothly functioning unit while each member retains a modicum of
individuality is a tribute to Roberta Kay, Victoria Berrett, Scott Weber
and Shani Barrett, who combined to stage the intricate numbers.
At the center of this ancient tale is its ubiquitous narrator, the
superlative singer-actress Adriana Sanchez, who weaves the story together
with a twinkling eye and a rapturously melodic voice. Sanchez interacts
beautifully with the other characters and the audience simultaneously,
while -- as so well put in “My Fair Lady,” -- oozing charm from every
pore.
Brandon Ibanez scores splendidly in the title role, enduring his
character’s many trials and tribulations with a humble dignity that soon
replaces his earlier narcissism. Ibanez projects a sinewy strength beyond
his muscular physique that sustains his character nobly.
The 11 brothers -- only 10 were present for Saturday’s opening night
-- are given nominal character traits, but function best as an ensemble,
and the absence of one due to a prior commitment scarcely marred the
overall effect. The tribe consists of Edward Gusts, Duane Allen Thomas,
Gary Trinidad, Mark Velarde, Marc Davila, Scott Weber, Tyler Schatzlein,
Darrin Caskey, Ruben Rodriguez Jr., Ryan Bean and Robert Argueta, with
Kenny Jagosz offering weepy moments as the father and Tanya Gallo as his
wife.
The show’s only weakness is in the performance of Emilio Maximum as
the Pharaoh, a role written as a sendup of Elvis Presley but delivered
more as a punk rocker by the actor who played the Elvis-type character
in “Bye Bye Birdie” last year. Maximum’s contribution is kept to a
minimum by his soft and inarticulate vocalizing.
Assisting Sanchez in setting up the story sequences are the fetching
temptresses, Deborah Bushman and Gabrielle Mann. Weber and Davila double
as Joseph’s fellow prisoners pouring out their dreams, while director
Lorton does a Hitchcockian turn as Potiphar, Joseph’s master, under the
pseudonym of Michael Banks --- the “Mary Poppins” character that was
Lorton’s first role in his youth.
Musically, “Joseph” has a little bit of everything from ‘50s rock ‘n’
roll, to Jacques Brel-style mourning to country and western to calypso
celebration. It’s a prolific potpourri of musical and visual artistry
blended into a most enjoyable ensemble.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His reviews
appear Thursdays and Saturdays.
FYI
WHAT: “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat”
WHERE: Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, 661 Hamilton St., Costa Mesa
WHEN: 8 p.m. Thursdays through Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sundays until March
25
TICKETS: $15
PHONE: (949) 650-5269
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