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Glory Days - closed

 

 

Circle in the Square Theatre
1633 Broadway
New York

Reviewed May, 2008
Running time 1 hours 30 minutes
Price $97.50


Five months ago, when Signature Theatre in Arlington
gave this small musical an intimate premiere production, it was an example of the truism that, as with many things in life, the magic of live musical theater works best when all the elements are in balance. The story fit the stage. The songs matched the characters. The set felt right, as did the costumes, and the performances were as clean and clear as the storytelling techniques of its young authors, a pair of (then) 23 year olds who hail from Montgomery County. Signature's Eric Schaeffer kept everything in balance in the 250-seat theater called "The Max" in the building they share with the County Library in Shirlington. Now, Schaeffer takes the show to Broadway. With the same cast and essentially the same design, no changes have been made to account for the fact that the theater they now occupy is more than twice as big, or that it shares a building not with a county library, but with the 2,000 seat theater where Wicked pulls in nearly $1.5 million a week. The choice to resist change may have been artistically correct, for the musical's strengths were its scale, its intimacy and the balance of all the pieces. It may also have been incredibly financially risky. Of course, any transfer to Broadway is a big financial risk, with this "simple transfer" requiring millions of dollars. This reviewer liked the show at Signature and I still like it at the Circle on the Square. Still, what seemed oh-so-right at the end of the two-block shopping village of Shirlington seems somehow skimpy when simply tucked into a corner on "The Great White Way." After all, at $97.50, the ticket for Glory Days is just $22.50 less than the top price and, believe it or not, $42.50 more than the cheapest seat for the extravaganza upstairs.


Storyline: Four friends gather in the bleachers of the high school football field as they approach the first anniversary of their graduation. They used to be fast friends, bound together by the shared experience of having been rejected for the football team that played on this very field. They haven't seen each other in that year and each has grown up a bit, and, as a result, they have grown apart.

The 23 year olds who wrote this musical are Nick Blaemire and James Gardiner. Nick who? James which? You might recognize Gardiner, but as a performer, not a book writer. He appeared at Signature in, among other musicals, The Witches of Eastwick (he was the young man Mark Kudisch tried to teach how to "Dance With The Devil"). Blaemire did a wonderfully droll rendition of "Mama Says" in the production of Footloose at Toby's Dinner Theatre of Columbia and now, not only does he have a musical playing on Broadway, he's in the cast of another Broadway show just a few blocks away, having just opened in Cry-Baby at the Marquis. As it did at Signature, Glory Day's book and pop-rock score seem a bit wordy in the early going, but settle into a highly effective pattern by the time the big numbers such as "Things Are Different," "The Good Old Glory Type Days" and especially "Other Human Beings" come along.

The four lads at the end of their freshman year of college are played by the same four fresh faces who originated the roles at Signature. Three are making their Broadway debuts, including Steven Booth who leads the pack as a writer who convened the reunion. The one cast member with Broadway credits (ensemble work in Cry-Baby and High Fidelity) is Andrew C. Call who delivers a more impressive, deeper performance now than he did in January as a frat boy whose self assurance is shaken by developments revealed by Jesse JP Johnson. Johnson delivers the powerful ballad, "Open Road," beautifully, while Adam Halprin provides a dash of maturity as the one former high school kid who seems to have matured the most in the first year of college. Each character is clearly drawn and fully human, with weaknesses as well as strengths you might expect from young men of this age.

Schaeffer keeps everything in the show in balance even if it is in a bigger house in a more competitive environment. The set design is simple  ... a platform painted to simulate turf, eight rows of bleacher seats and a bank of stadium lights as a backdrop that can change color with the mood of the moment and create patterns and movement when that will help get the message across. The costumes clearly match the characteristics of each character and the lighting subtly segues into night as the evening progresses. A band of four (keyboard, guitar, bass and drums) sits behind the backdrop. Most notable, however, is the way the entire production moves. James Gardiner's twin brother, Matthew, was credited at Signature with "assistant direction and musical staging." No such credit appears on the front page of the program now, but back in the biographical sketches you can still find his labeled "assistant director." How much of the energetic romping up and down the bleachers and the reclining over and sprawling on the benches is Schaeffer's blocking and how much is Gardiner's contribution isn't clear. But whoever saw to the pent-up energy of the movement and the youthful posturing that marks the entire performance deserves great credit.

Music and lyrics by Nick Blaemire. Book by James Gardiner. Directed by Eric Schaeffer. Musical direction by Ethan Popp. Music arranged and orchestrated by Jesse Vargas. Design: James Kronzer (set) Sasha Ludwig-Siegel (costumes) Mark Lanks (lights) Peter Hylenski (sound) Gregg Kirsopp (production stage manager) Jess W. Speaker III (stage manager). Cast: Steven Booth, Andrew C. Call, Adam Halpin, Jesse JP Johnson. Musicians: Damien Bassman, Alec Berlin, Gary Bristol, Ethan Popp.