APA Tappers Turn Back the Clock in ‘42nd Street’
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Tom Titus
More than 70 years ago, a young Ruby Keeler set America’s feet to
tapping under their movie seats in the showbiz musical “42nd Street.”
Musical aficionados have been dancing to that beat ever since.
Now, the Academy for the Performing Arts at Huntington Beach High
School invites you to “come and meet those dancing feet” in its
all-out, full-scale revival of this definitive showbiz musical.
Director Tim Nelson and choreographer Diane Makas-Weber have
fashioned a faithful rendition of this screen (and later, stage)
classic, filling the large stage at Huntington Beach High School with
52 pairs of dancing feet tapping up a storm, backed by a full
orchestra under the baton of Gregg Gilboe.
Few shows from the 1930s, with the notable exception of “The
Wizard of Oz,” occupy today’s musical theater practitioners quite so
much as “42nd Street,” in which a young girl fresh off the bus from
Allentown, Pa., taps her way to stardom when she’s called upon to
replace the leading lady in a do-or-die musical for its hard-shelled
director.
The curtain rises on some four dozen pairs of dancing feet
auditioning for a new Broadway show, and audiences will be instantly
aware that they’re in for a lively time. Makas-Weber’s troupe of
talented tootsies will recall, for the more seasoned playgoers, the
days of the Busby Berkeley movie musical.
Nelson’s Academy for the Performing Arts production showcases a
plethora of singing and dancing talent, topped off by some engaging
performances in the central roles.
Most prominent among the leads is the steely, egocentric but
fading Broadway star Dorothy Brock, beautifully interpreted by Elaine
Hayhurst.
There’s a hard and honest edge here that doesn’t often manifest
itself in other versions of this musical.
Alex Bartosch excels as the demanding director who needs one more
hit show to re-establish himself. And Katie Ulrich is bright and
perky as Peggy, the chorine just off the bus from Allentown whose
magic feet save the show, and the day, for the Broadway company.
Alex’s brother, Matt Bartosch, is his sibling’s polar opposite as
the easygoing lead dancer in the make-or-break show who takes a shine
to Peggy. Nicole Gerardi is engaging as the brassy chorine known as
“Anytime Annie,” while Gretchen Dawson particularly impresses as
Maggie, the songwriter-performer who creates the show numbers with
Greg Plunkett.
Others notable in support are Jonathan Dean as the rustic
zillionaire who’s backing the production and Josh Allton as his rival
for Hayhurst’s affections.
Gilboe’s full student orchestra enthusiastically punctuates the
show’s familiar score, which includes “You’re Getting to Be a Habit
With Me,” “Lullaby of Broadway” and the big, splashy number “We’re in
the Money,” set against a glittering backdrop costumed by Katie Timm.
“42nd Street” is a fully realized valentine to show business the
way it used to be, with the improbable transformation of ingenue into
star which has been borrowed in many a story since this show made its
debut in 1933. Come and meet these dancing feet before the show
closes this weekend.
* TOM TITUS reviews local theater for the Independent.
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