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Based on a story and characters by Damon
Runyon
Music & Lyrics by Frank Loesser
Book by Jo Swerling and Abe Burrows
Musically Directed by Todd Helm
Choreographed by Lee Martino
Directed by Nick DeGruccio
Musical Theatre West at The Carpenter Center, Long
Beach, CA

By
David C. Nichols, Special to The Los Angeles Times
Reviewing "Guys and Dolls" in
1950, critic Brooks Atkinson said, "It is a more coherent show than some that
have higher artistic pretensions." He was right - Frank Loesser, Jo Swerling and
Abe Burrows' ageless riff on Damon Runyon is
a perfectly
constructed classic, as the superb Musical Theatre West revival demonstrates.
Director
Nick DeGruccio favors musical fable over antic cartoon, which pays top-notch
returns. As the
swinging band helmed by musical director Todd Helm erupts into the prologue, a
collective grin crosses the venue. Brass licks announce Nicely-Nicely Johnson
(John Massey), Benny Southstreet (Robert Marra) and Rusty Charlie (Robert
Pieranunzi). They sidle into "Fugue for Tinhorns," and
musical
comedy heaven is nigh.
Credit the cast, a solid-gold
gang that inhales the argot and Loesser's evergreen score. Tami Tappan Damiano
is ideal as missionary Sarah Brown, her Bacardi-woozy "If I Were a Bell" most
endearing. She has great chemistry with Kevin Earley's clarion-voiced Sky
Masterson, who builds to a galvanic "Luck Be a Lady." Patrick De Santis invests
floating crap-game maven Nathan Detroit with precise hangdog bristle. As his
"well-known fiance," Miss Adelaide, the priceless Bets Malone, suggests Judy
Holliday on Sudafed. Massey and Marra rip up the title song, while Nils Anderson
gives Sarah's grandfather touching sincerity. Herschel Sparber of the 1992
revival remains a hilarious behemoth as Big Jule, and so goes the joyous roster,
properly stopping the show at "Sit Down, You're Rockin' the Boat."
Choreographer Lee Martino
outdoes herself, with deft floorshow routines and a whirligig crapshooter's
ballet. The rental sets evoke Jo Mielziner, costume coordinator Todd K. Proto
tweaks reality into satire, and Jeremy Pivnick offers swell lighting.
Broadway-loving lugs and skirts won't find a surer bet than this vintage trip to
Runyonland.
- LA Times, Critic's Choice
MTW's "Guys and Dolls" Shines
If you want to experience a rare phenomenon when script, cast and
enactment meld to form a lustrous whole, get thee to the Carpenter Performing
Arts Center to see Musical Theatre West's excellent song-studded production of
Frank Loesser's "Guys and Dolls," directed by Nick DeGrucio.
Not only is the story sweet and
tight, the characters memorable, but the acting, the singing and, especially,
the dancing were superb; and the sets were definitely something to write home
about. The depiction of Sky's flight to Cuba alone was worth the price of
admission.
-
James Scarborough for the Grunion Gazette
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