Cat in Hat Rigby shines in ‘Seussical’
Tom Titus
Theodor (Dr. Seuss) Geisel was the emperor of imagination for
generations of youngsters from the mid-1940s to 1990, the year his
last work was published, just a year before his death at 87. His
legacy lives on in “Seussical the Musical,” now on stage at the
Orange County Performing Arts Center.
Unabashedly aimed at the sandbox set, but with enough pizazz to
charm the senior citizens, “Seussical” is a collection of a
half-century’s worth of prolific observations from the creator of
“The Cat in the Hat,” “Green Eggs and Ham” and other Seussisms. It is
set to music by the composer-lyricist team of Lynn Ahrens and Stephen
Flaherty, with an assist from Monty Python’s Eric Idle.
It all comes together somehow, loosely stitched but engagingly
presented in what amounts to a triumphant homecoming for its star,
Orange County’s Cathy Rigby, who -- as the ubiquitous Cat in the Hat
-- orchestrates the entertainment, interacts with the audience and
demonstrates that, even at the half-century mark, this former Olympic
gymnast still has the stuff to fly like the character she’s best
known for -- Peter Pan.
Rigby is simply splendiferous in the part she took over on
Broadway and continues to headline on the show’s national tour (can
you imagine the role’s originator, Rosie O’Donnell, doing cartwheels
in mid-air? Me neither). Director Christopher Ashley has utilized the
full range of Rigby’s comedic charm and boundless energy, and the
actress delights both young and old with her zany antics and her
magnetic hold on her audience.
She’s assisted, in most of her activity, by Drake English, one of
two youngsters who plays the central character of JoJo in the cotton
candy-light plot, a boy whose thinking powers get him in all sorts of
scrapes. Young English is a real pint-sized trouper who turns in a
thoroughly attractive performance.
Seuss’ famous elephant character, Horton, looks no more like a
pachyderm than you or I, but with a flat cap with ear flaps, Eric
Leviton produces a gullible, somewhat paunchy schlub who earns a full
measure of empathy from his audience. Both the female who takes
advantage of him and the one who adores him are of the avian variety
-- the flashy, egocentric Mayzie LaBird (Gaelen Gilliland) and the
wallflower with a single tail feather Gertrude McFuzz (Garrett Long)
-- and both are terrific.
With Natasha Yvette Williams rattling the walls with her
vocalizing as the Sour Kangaroo; Don Stitt and Amy Griffin fretting
as Whoville’s ultra-conventional mayor and his wife, and Richard
Rowan strutting on from time to time as the militaristic General
Ghenghis Kahn Schmitz, the show maintains a snappy comic appeal.
Seuss’ other notable characters, the Grinch and Yertle the Turtle,
are mere walk-ons in this scenario.
The Seussical orchestra, under the baton of John Mezzio, keeps the
tempo humming at a sprightly pitch. The show is ultra-colorful thanks
to David Woolard’s imaginative costumes and James Kronzer’s scenic
designs.
At two hours and 20 minutes, the show may be a bit extended for
the pre-schoolers in the audience, but it’s a rollicking taste of
inspired nonsense nevertheless. And Cathy Rigby alone is worth the
price of admission for her superior showmanship as the mischievous
feline.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Daily Pilot. His
reviews appear Thursdays and Saturdays, and occasionally Sundays.
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