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PicksInSix Review: MJ The Musical - Broadway In Chicago

 
 

MJ – All about the Music.
PicksInSix® Review | Ed Tracy

If you need a more obvious example of the deep connection of Michael Jackson’s extraordinary pop legacy on our musical culture and psyche, you need look no further than the cover of the Playbill for the North American tour of “MJ” that officially opened at Chicago’s James M. Nederlander Theatre on Wednesday night. The iconic black and white graphic of Jackson in mid-flex, floating with heels high, chin defiantly pitched and shaded by a black fedora and poised in a defiant, forceful motion that appears to glide across the ruby red background on the page, says it all. No title necessary.

As every member of the exuberant, capacity crowd was aware—red carpet A-List attendees and frenzied fans from in and out of town—the long-anticipated opening seemingly electrified the corner of Randolph and Dearborn at the epicenter of Chicago’s Theatre District. And that eager and unabashed excitement continued straight through the performance as Jackson’s musical legacy unfolded from childhood music sensation to pop superstar.

Presented by special arrangement with the estate of Michael Jackson, a book by two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage and directed and choreographed with unbridled passion by Tony Award®-winner Christopher Wheeldon, “MJ” features a non-stop adrenaline rush of several dozens of Jackson’s chartbusting music including hits from the early days of the Jackson Five and his ground-breaking solo career.

In a sweeping narrative set in 1992 days before the launch of Jackson’s Dangerous World Tour, the show evolves from a rehearsal session that introduces the extraordinary Roman Banks as Jackson—a performer of unparalleled physical and vocal range—whose arresting presence captivates every moment he is on stage. In the context of the rehearsal, Jackson’s story stretches past the sorted familial relationship with his domineering and abusive father Joe (Devin Bowles) and the Jackson’s breakthrough with Berry Gordy, to Michael’s collaborative work with Quincy Jones that paved the way for solo stardom. Nottage delves deeply into the sources of Jackson’s obsession with perfection in his work.

The backstory is framed in flashbacks told through the device of a fictional MTV interview that allows the Jackson catalog to weave in, out and around the action with a team of superb Jackson’s of various ages—Brandon Lee Harris as middle Michael and Josiah Benson as little Michael, at the opening—along the way. All the while, Banks serves as narrator and observer of the story of Jackson’s life as it unfolds, until it is time to return to the iconic vocal performances—and Wheeldon’s spellbinding choreography—buoyed by the rich, and often explosive, scenic elements (Derek McLane) and projections (Peter Nigrini) punctuated with dynamic lighting (Nastasha Katz), pin-point perfect costumes (Paul Tazewell) and sound (Gareth Owen) that magnify the lavish, non-stop musical core of the show.

Jackson’s career as originator, innovator and pop superstar is brilliantly conveyed by Banks, who reveals the aspirational, soft-spoken, visionary artist as one committed to the music at all costs in the face of the rising stakes to his health. During an era when industry views were literally shifting overnight by MTV, the media and public demand, the sheer force of Jackson’s impact becomes a turning-point in the story and the complicated life of one of the most celebrated—and conflicted—performers of all time. At some point, for a future generation, it may be necessary to include “MJ” on the Playbill cover. But, not here and not now. That impact shines vividly through September 2 on the Nederlander stage in Banks’s stunning performance and Wheeldon’s equally extraordinary and exhilarating choreography and direction.     

PHOTO | Matthew Murphy

MJ
The Musical

North American Tour
James M. Nederlander Theatre

through September 2


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PicksInSix Review: A SOLDIER'S PLAY - Broadway in Chicago

 
 

Fistfuls of alternating power and hate.
Guest Contributor Ronald Keaton|PicksInSix® Review

“They still hate you!”  The words ring out as the first moments in witnessing a murder. They are accompanied by a seeming prisoner’s work song from soldiers in an impressionistic barracks– the set piece of the painful, eloquent “A Soldier’s Play,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning play by American playwright Charles Fuller, whom we lost last October.  And it’s all deftly staged by the marvelous director Kenny Leon and now revived through Roundabout Theatre Company’s 2020 Tony Award-winning production on tour throughout North America and at Broadway In Chicago’s CIBC Theatre through April 16.

It’s a phrase with a fatalistic implication, as uttered by a drunken Sergeant Vernon C. Waters (a masterful presence throughout by Eugene Lee) from the 2nd floor of a US Army barracks set design by Derek McLane.  It’s stark and hazy, both at once, reflective of a time (the Deep South in Louisiana during World War II) that shows how stunningly small the progress for the civil rights movement in America was in its segregated military from the Civil War to these moments.

Captain Richard Davenport (a stylish, emotional Norm Lewis), a Black Army officer, has been sent to Fort Neal, Louisiana, to investigate the killing. He is received at first with mocking and almost disbelief by Captain Charles Taylor (William Connell), who expresses his displeasure with Davenport questioning anyone, no matter their race, because of their low regard in a military placed in the old Confederacy…A Black officer?  AND a lawyer?  Indeed, the initial suspects are local Klansmen. Then later on, two bigoted white soldiers (strong turns by Matthew Goodrich and Chattan Mayes Johnson) fall under Davenport’s suspicion.

The story is told in atmospheric flashback sequences, as Davenport’s piercing questions create memories for the audience to absorb, through each man’s story in the unit being questioned. Sgt. Waters–ambitious, of strong intellect and self-regard–treated the soldiers in his unit as almost sub-standard, making them fit into the stereotypes he views as “holding our race back.”  But in that same regard, he belatedly realizes in his drunken state that his white ‘superiors’ will never allow him his equality, no matter how much he might emulate their own behavior and attitudes.  For those actions and his persecution of the soldiers he commands, Waters is murdered while uttering his own death knell–they do still hate him.  All of them.

Mr. Lewis offers a strong military man who is not afraid to take charge of the investigation.  His Davenport acts also as a kind of gentle, principled narrator who guides us through the maze of this complex tale.  Mr. Lee is magnetic and grabs his moments in fistfuls of alternating power and hate.  Mr. Connell’s Captain Taylor is properly doubtful and disdaining.  For this writer, the strength of the story lies with the men in the barracks.  The one modicum of respect given them (if one can call it that) is that all these men are baseball players from the Negro Leagues, and they play ball against white teams every Saturday during the season.  They are skilled athletes who fiercely bond together in that baseball experience, even as Waters denigrates them for doing so.  Our eyes and hearts are drawn to the wonderful Sheldon D. Brown as CJ Memphis, a gentle and pure soul who is driven to suicide and a fine, prickly Tarik Lowe as Peterson, who challenges Waters with his own misguided passions.  There is a host of clear, articulate characterizations from a topnotch ensemble of artists–Howard Overshown, Branden Davon Lindsey, Malik Esoj Childs, Alex Michael Givens, and Will Adams.

A SOLDIER’S PLAY - at the CIBC Theatre through April 16, 2023. Broadway in Chicago

As the albatross around the country’s neck, the battle of racism in America continues as a piercing-hot specter to face, to understand and to deal with in all its forms.  Mr. Fuller’s forceful, passionate prose makes us do so with issues that still tragically ring true in our contemporary world.  Mr. Leon, one of our great theatre craftsmen, shows us in his wily direction straight-on how such issues stand up and make us stare. And wonder.  And in moments good and bad, take action to address.  A full experience here to view for us all.

GUEST CONTRIBUTOR | RONALD KEATON received an Equity Jeff Award for the performance of his one-man show CHURCHILL. www.solochicagotheatre.com  Coming soon, his new solo play “Echo Holler.” www.echoholler.com

PHOTO|Joan Marcus

BROADWAY IN CHICAGO
A SOLDIER’S PLAY
CIBC Theatre
through April 16, 2023

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