Wednesday, August 8, 2012

"The Unbearable Lightness of Being"... A Cheerleader


Cheerleading is not a philosophical endeavor. We get that. But it should have plenty of verve.

"Bring It On, The Musical," at the St. James Theatre for a limited run through October 7th, wants to make absolutely clear that it is a physically demanding activity.


The cast of "Bring It On" (C) Photo by Joan Marcus
In fact, Campbell (Taylor Louderman) narrates the facts of her life as she becomes the captain of the Truman pep-squad, introducing the predictable power points that describe this spirited pursuit and the dedication with which she pursues it. Complications follow when Campbell is transferred to Jackson High in a stroke of redistricting. At Jackson, Campbell meets Danielle (Adrienne Warren) the leader of a dance crew.Will she triumph and find her "One Perfect Moment?" 

Taylor Louderman, Neil Haskell, Kate Rockwell, and Janet Krupin (c) Photo by Joan Marcus 
The songs (by the usually brilliant Lin-Manuel Miranda ("In The Heights" was terrific)  who teams up with Amanda Green on lyrics and Tom Kitt for the music) narrate a dull recitation of the lives of girls determined to win a state championship in rallying. Jeff Whitty has created a libretto based on the 2000 movie written by Jessica Bendinger to take "Bring It On" to the stage.


Adrienne Warren and cast. Photo (c) Joan Marcus 
Once there, even with propulsive rally-squad moves and togh hip-hop inflected dancing (choreographed by Andy Blankenbuehler, who also directs), "Bring It On" dies a thousand deaths. Stereotypes abound: the black girls (and guys) are cool, the white girls vapid. Campbell's boyfriend Steve (Neil Haskell) is pretty effectively channelling his inner Woody Harrelson as Woody Boyd from "Cheers."  Despite the paucity of interesting characters, Adrienne Warren as the head of the Jackson dancers,  and Ryann Redmond as the fat girl, Bridget, are both quite charming.

Gasps of admiration at girls tossed into the air and landing gracefully quickly dissipate in the general dumbing down. Unfortunately dumbing down seems to have risen to a competitive sport in this musical. Aiming squarely for the lowest common denominator, "Bring It On" hits its target.

For more information about "Bring It On, The Musical," visit  http://www.bringitonmusical.com/

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