Nice review, thought I'd share, enjoy! http://matineepodcast.blogspot.com/2008/10/grease-vs-grease.html.
Thanks, Sparkle!!! I loved it! It's always great to read positive reviews! And I love that other people are gettting to see how wonderfully talented Ashley is!
Being a reality show junkie, I had watched "Grease, You're the One that I Want" and was first on line for tickets when the show opened on Broadway last summer. We loved the winners Max Crumm and Laura Osnes. Max was such a down to earth cutie and Laura's voice was gorgeous. But we also loved some of the runners-up including Ashley Spencer and Derek Keeling. So we were thrilled to hear that the original cast was being replaced by these two runners-up. I was given the chance to meet the cast and of course jumped on it. I even let my daughter miss her dance classes that evening because I knew meeting Ashley and Derek would be a thrill for her. So off we went to Sardi's, a New York restaurant which is located in the heart of the theatre district. Known for the hundreds of caricatures of show business celebrities that adorn its walls, Sardi's opened at its current location on March 5, 1927. That's even before Madame Aries was born. Six members of the cast walked in including Ashley and Derek who play Sandy and Danny. To our surprise, one of our favorite American Idol contestants was among them. Ace Young, a season five finalist, and that year's heartthrob is the new Kenickie. We also met Janine Divita (Rizzo), Will Blum (Roger) and Kirsten Wyatt (Frenchie), the only one we had seen in previews. Each one of them was warm and personable. I chatted at length to Will Blum and Ace Young, both of whom were adorable and very forthcoming. Will told me there had been some changes made along with the cast changes so I left knowing I had to see it again. Last Wednesday was a school holiday and a perfect day to catch the matinee. We arrived at the theatre fifteen minutes before show time to find Dominic Fortuna who plays Vince Fontaine on stage warming up the audience. This was a new and fun addition which really got the audience fired up, always a good thing. The overture starts, the lockers open and out come the T-Birds singing the title song "Grease" and then the Pink Ladies. Oh, I love this show. It's a party, a celebration of life. And as much as we loved it the first time, we enjoyed it even more this time. Maybe it was because we had met the cast. They were all great and the changes in the staging really worked. I especially thought Ashley Spencer was wonderful as Sandy. I had seen her as Amber Von Tussle in Hairspray and was very impressed with her comedic timing and presence. And Ace Young, what can I say. Smashing. He sang well, he moved well, he played the tough guy well, and well, he could have played the lead. Not to say Derek wasn't great in the part of Danny. He was very good and definitely looked like "Danny". Ace really has stage appeal and the "it" factor and I smell a great future for him. He did tell me that there was film in his future and he does have a CD out and a single "Addicted" on the charts, plus he was nominated for a Grammy for co-writing "It's Not Over" for fellow American Idol finalist, Chris Daughtry. Janine Divita was wonderful as Rizzo, a part totally unlike the real person, as was Will Blum as Roger. Kirsten Wyatt was the same scene stealer she was the first time we saw her, very perky and adorable in the role, very much like her real personality. After the show the fun continued when we met the cast as they left the theatre. They all remembered us and treated us like old friends. Ace hugged and kissed us and was as playful as he had been at Sardi's, including bopping me on the head with a playbill when I said out loud while he was taking a picture with another fan "isn't it a pity he's so ugly".
The first time we saw this production of Grease we loved it, but the second time is a charm. This edition of Grease is a winner. The cast is fabulous, the changes successful, and of course there's the wonderful score. Jade and I had a blast and I didn't think about my waning bank account for the rest of the day.
What a great review, "This Edition of Grease is a Winner! The cast is fabulous, the changes successful" How great is that and Derek, was very good and looked like "Danny" Awsome
Yes, Derek is even more handsome in person! I've seen him more than once. And, I don't know how he does it, but he gets cuter and cuter..each time I see him.
Yes, Derek is even more handsome in person! I've seen him more than once. And, I don't know how he does it, but he gets cuter and cuter..each time I see him.
That picture of him on the car is "one of a kind."
Yes, I think getting to see Ace perform as Kenickie is another benefit of going back to see "Grease" again. Of course, what I am really going for is to see Ashley as "Sandy" but I believe that getting to see Ace will add to my enjoyment of the show as well.
What a nice review about the whole cast. Of course I do love that fact that she loved Ashley as Sandy and that she has seen her in Hairspray too. Her family and friends have always thought that Ashley had a great comedic sense of timing and it is nice to see that someone else thinks so too.
What a nice review about the whole cast. Of course I do love that fact that she loved Ashley as Sandy and that she has seen her in Hairspray too. Her family and friends have always thought that Ashley had a great comedic sense of timing and it is nice to see that someone else thinks so too.
-- Edited by Suddenly_Sandy at 03:22, 2008-10-10
Definitely! She was wonderful in "Hairspray," and Amber was a great role to show her fantastic ability to do comedy. I think that Ashley has a wonderful future ahead of her with many fantastic roles. Comedy would definitely be a good option!
Being a reality show junkie, I had watched "Grease, You're the One that I Want" and was first on line for tickets when the show opened on Broadway last summer. We loved the winners Max Crumm and Laura Osnes. Max was such a down to earth cutie and Laura's voice was gorgeous. But we also loved some of the runners-up including Ashley Spencer and Derek Keeling. So we were thrilled to hear that the original cast was being replaced by these two runners-up. I was given the chance to meet the cast and of course jumped on it. I even let my daughter miss her dance classes that evening because I knew meeting Ashley and Derek would be a thrill for her. So off we went to Sardi's, a New York restaurant which is located in the heart of the theatre district. Known for the hundreds of caricatures of show business celebrities that adorn its walls, Sardi's opened at its current location on March 5, 1927. That's even before Madame Aries was born. Six members of the cast walked in including Ashley and Derek who play Sandy and Danny. To our surprise, one of our favorite American Idol contestants was among them. Ace Young, a season five finalist, and that year's heartthrob is the new Kenickie. We also met Janine Divita (Rizzo), Will Blum (Roger) and Kirsten Wyatt (Frenchie), the only one we had seen in previews. Each one of them was warm and personable. I chatted at length to Will Blum and Ace Young, both of whom were adorable and very forthcoming. Will told me there had been some changes made along with the cast changes so I left knowing I had to see it again. Last Wednesday was a school holiday and a perfect day to catch the matinee. We arrived at the theatre fifteen minutes before show time to find Dominic Fortuna who plays Vince Fontaine on stage warming up the audience. This was a new and fun addition which really got the audience fired up, always a good thing. The overture starts, the lockers open and out come the T-Birds singing the title song "Grease" and then the Pink Ladies. Oh, I love this show. It's a party, a celebration of life. And as much as we loved it the first time, we enjoyed it even more this time. Maybe it was because we had met the cast. They were all great and the changes in the staging really worked. I especially thought Ashley Spencer was wonderful as Sandy. I had seen her as Amber Von Tussle in Hairspray and was very impressed with her comedic timing and presence. And Ace Young, what can I say. Smashing. He sang well, he moved well, he played the tough guy well, and well, he could have played the lead. Not to say Derek wasn't great in the part of Danny. He was very good and definitely looked like "Danny". Ace really has stage appeal and the "it" factor and I smell a great future for him. He did tell me that there was film in his future and he does have a CD out and a single "Addicted" on the charts, plus he was nominated for a Grammy for co-writing "It's Not Over" for fellow American Idol finalist, Chris Daughtry. Janine Divita was wonderful as Rizzo, a part totally unlike the real person, as was Will Blum as Roger. Kirsten Wyatt was the same scene stealer she was the first time we saw her, very perky and adorable in the role, very much like her real personality. After the show the fun continued when we met the cast as they left the theatre. They all remembered us and treated us like old friends. Ace hugged and kissed us and was as playful as he had been at Sardi's, including bopping me on the head with a playbill when I said out loud while he was taking a picture with another fan "isn't it a pity he's so ugly".
The first time we saw this production of Grease we loved it, but the second time is a charm. This edition of Grease is a winner. The cast is fabulous, the changes successful, and of course there's the wonderful score. Jade and I had a blast and I didn't think about my waning bank account for the rest of the day.
When I saw Grease years ago they had the Vince Fontaine character warming up the audience before the show as well. I had taken a group of students to the show, and they got up on the stage and danced and stuff.....it was a blast!
AISLE SAY Philadelphia GREASE Book, Music and Lyrics by Jim Jacobs and Warren Casey Directed by Ray DeMattis Starring Frankie Avalon The Academy of Music, Avenue of the Arts, Philadelphia, PA Playing through June 22, 2003 Kimmel Center Box Office: (215) 893-1999 Website: http://www.act2.org/www.kimmelcenter.org/broadway Reviewed by Claudia Perry Going to this National Tour of "Grease" is a little like going to a Vaudeville show. Because for the price of a ticket, Phoenix Productions gives you a lot for your money. You get a Dance Contest starting at 7:30 run by Arthur J. M. Callahan who plays Vince Fontaine in the show proper. The pre-show warm-up ends with a taped version of Barry Gibb's "Grease" from the movie which Mr. Callahan encourages everyone to sing and clap along with. Tee shirts are given away to the lucky two dance couples (last night consisting of two really little girls aged four and five and a mom and her 10 year-old daughter). Then you get the show, "Grease" with two great songs from the film, "Hopelessly Devoted to You" and "You're the One That I Want" by John Farrar. Then when the show is over and the cast has taken their bows they launch into a mini-reprise of the show's highlights ñ but now with the band cranked up to ear splitting decibels. But wait, it's not over yet, this is all an elaborate Vegas style intro for Frankie Avalon to take his bow ñ which he does, most graciously, insisting that we applaud once again for the hard working cast. But Mr. Avalon hasn't come out just to take a bow. No folks, like I said you get a lot for your money here. Mr. Avalon then proceeds to tell a few jokes, sing a few songs and chat with the audience for another ten minutes (while the cast sits behind him crooning background vocals). And if that isn't enough, we even get to see Bobby Rydell, who is sitting in the audience, stand up and take a bow. (This was just for Press Night to plug Frankie and Bobby's nightclub act in Atlantic City.) The little reprise to announce Mr. Avalon is completely unnecessary as Mr. Avalon is terrific in the show and will receive a warm ovation from any audience, regardless of whether it's his hometown or not. But I guess they felt they had to give "the star" a big buildup.
The one thing I find irritating is that the producers are trying to push this show as a "family show", which it categorically is not and never was. Unless of course you want your kids coming away with the moral that: If you cave in to peer pressure, smoke cigarettes, drink, wear provocative clothing and "put out", you'll get the boy of your dreams. Hey, they'll learn these things soon enough. Why rush it? "Grease" is a funny, crass, sometimes vulgar parody of the 1950's with a great score and that's what makes it tick. So leave the little kiddies at home. Parental Discretion is advised for teens. There's probably nothing they haven't already seen or heard in a PG-13 Movie, although we do see Roger's (Rump's) bare buttocks. Well, he does sing a song about mooning for heaven's sake.
But let's talk about the star of this show in his cameo role as Teen Angel. I have never been a Frankie Avalon fan until now. Mr. Avalon is flawless. It's kind of hard to believe that he sang "Beauty School Dropout" in the film, "Grease" twenty-five years ago, but those are the facts. I guess there is something to be said for clean living, because twenty-five years later Mr. Avalon still sounds terrific, looks terrific and possesses all the grace, poise and charm of a man who was born to be an entertainer. So having him come out and do a bit of his act at the end of the show was not only a nice surprise but also a real treat for the audience.
But the main reason why this "Grease" is a good time is because of the excellent cast. Vocally they are all non-pareil . And though it seems they have been encouraged to push their acting style "over the top", still their vocal ability and sheer energy are quite winning. Jamey Isenor is a great Danny Zuko with a powerful voice and great comic timing. He's also tall and buff. Gee, what more could you ask for in a leading man? Hanna-Lina Vosa is sweet and appealing as Sandy Dumbrowski in a way that is very human and not at all caricaturish. Her voice is lovely, and one of the few "real" moments in the show is when she comes out by herself and sings, "Hopelessly Devoted to You." Jacqueline Colmer possesses an awesome vocal instrument and does it justice in her solo, "There are Worse Things I Could Do." I also felt her portrayal of bad girl Rizzo was rooted in a nice reality.
For me, it's the choreography by Christopher Gattelli that keeps this show fun and clever. Unfortunately, the costumes were highly unattractive and downright "wrong" for the period, with the girls' dress hemlines being way too short. I'm sure the choreographer didn't mind -- as it makes it easier for the ladies to dance in ñ but this is not supposed to be the sixties. And the wigs sported by Frenchy were ridiculously large. The sets by James Youmans are simple and cartoonish, with a big neon sign of "Grease" flying from the ceiling before and after the show. The orchestrations seem to have a decidedly more modern twist this time around. Though they don't list the band members in the program and I forgot to look in the pit, I don't think the band is very large. But they really cook and make a hell of a lot of noise ñ in fact at times a bit too much. Sometimes they have to remember that they are "accompanying" the singers. Sorry, guys, that's why you're in "the pit" and not on stage.
In case you didn't know, just a reminder that "Summer Nights", "We Go Together", "Greased Lightnin'" and "Alone at the Drive-in Movie" all come from this fun score. So if you're looking for a purely entertaining evening or a great date show ñ this is it.