January 11, 2006
The First Days of Discussion
I met Whit Stillman last night, director of Metropolitan and Barcelona (to name two films). He's a friend of our producer and was very kind. Told me he thought I was a fantastic straight man...which means, get ready to see me in Whit Stillman's next bawdy comedy romp as the stodgy professorial type who learns that sometimes it's okay to cut loose and have a little fun.
Here's the full review from THE TIMES OF LONDON. He gave the show five stars (out of five)!
Gutenberg! The Musical!
Clive Davis at Jerym Street Theatre, SW1CALL it synchronicity, if you like. On the very day that The Phantom of the Opera set the record for the longest run on Broadway, two young Americans were demonstrating just how much fun you can have driving a stake through the heart of a portentous, dumbed-down extravaganza.
Playing in a venue that is barely big enough to hold one of the Phantom’s famous chandeliers, Gutenberg! The Musical! — receiving its world premiere in London — contains more wit and intelligence than three decades of megashows.
Written and performed by Anthony King and Scott Brown, this small but perfectly formed entertainment embarks on a gleeful rampage through every stock device ever tossed in front of tour-bus audiences. If you want to bring a seminal historical figure to life, all you need are some illiterate medieval burghers, a handful of rock-lite riffs, some deliciously contrived anachronisms, a love interest called Helvetica and an ample supply of peaked caps.
Caps? Well, yes. With no scenery or costumes and only the pianist, Michael Roulston, for company, King (tall and preppy) and Brown (short and impish) signal changes of character by donning a selection of identical cruise-ship headwear emblazoned with the individual’s title. My favourite is the leering, bigoted flowerseller who runs amok under the label “Antisemite”.
Sometimes wearing a half-dozen hats all at once, the duo enact meticulously choreographed crowd scenes and deliver a string of dubious historical titbits.
The central conceit is that we are witnessing a run-through of a show that is desperately seeking a West End backer. Endlessly apologetic, the two performers supply a commentary on the nuts and bolts of modern musical theatre, introducing us to “charm songs” and all the other contrivances that are part of the composer and producer’s arsenal.
The evening could easily have slipped into cynical overkill, but the entire parody is delivered with the lightest of touches. Sometimes I found myself wondering whether the co-lyricists had been rummaging in Randy Newman’s desk. The satire is so droll, you could easily imagine it finding a place on one of his albums.
How did the rise of the printing press affect the Church? Why does the evil Monk speak in a Deep South drawl and why is he obsessed with sharpening pencils? Questions, questions. Gutenberg! delights in leaving them all hanging in the air. All that remains is whether the production can transfer to a larger space without destroying the chemistry. Fingers crossed.
Box office: 020-7287 2875 Theatre
And here are a few links to some other reviews (both mostly good):
There's also a pretty good review in Time Out London (4 of 6 stars), though the reviewer actually makes the dumb Steve Guttenberg joke. Unfortunately I can't find a link to the actual review, but he calls the show "valiant guff," which I want to get emblazoned on a T-shirt.
More to come....
Posted by Anthony King at January 11, 2006 05:06 AMCongratulations! Bangers and mash for everyone.
Awesome awesome awesome! Way to go Ant!
This is amazing. I can't believe this is all actually, like, HAPPENING.
Wow! What a great review and other some dern good ones. That was fun to read. Congratulations.
Congratulations! I'll send everyone I know in London your way. (That's like two whole tickets!)
This is too cool. So awesome for you guys.
I had just read in a book that a wave of puritanism in the US in the 18th century led to the British "titbit" becoming the American "tidbit." Cool to see that word involving "tit" is still being thrown around in legitimate British theater reviews.
Who plays the Big West End Producer?
what? you're in london and you didn't tell me? dude!
So... they don't call them Trucker hats? Interesting.
Congrats Ant! Well deserved.
Whit Stillman is one of my heros. I am ridiculously jealous







