Big River, Avenue Q - New York Magazine Theater Review - Nymag (2024)

Big River, Avenue Q - New York Magazine Theater Review - Nymag (1)

The current revival of the musical Big River is the brainchild of director and choreographer Jeff Calhoun, whose idea it was to blend deaf-mute and hearing actors in the same production, both using American Sign Language to convey words and lyrics in addition to those voiced by the hearing actors. In one case, actors of each kind were joined together in near-Siamese union, each performing in his own way. If this sounds redundant or confusing, so it was—at first. But one got used to it, at times even deriving enrichment from the procedure.

It is heartening to see challenged performers and spectators join the mainstream and demonstrate that certain previously ironclad boundaries can fall like the Berlin Wall, putting an end to—or at least a dent into—a form of ghettoization. You may not feel that this version of Big River is bigger than the original, but you won’t find it conspicuously smaller. Missed, to be sure, are Heidi Landesman’s munificent sets; still, with greater economy and no small ingenuity, these by Ray Klausen do very nicely indeed. Displayed by way of scenery and props all over the stage are the greatly enlarged covers, pages, and illustrations of the original edition of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, of which this is an inevitably shortened and simplified adaptation by Roger Miller (music and lyrics) and William Hauptman (book).

I mentioned enrichment. Thus when the nonspeaking Huck and speaking Jim affirm their newfound friendship’s superseding the master-and-slave relationship, they do so on the raft in the loveliest number, “Worlds Apart.” They face each other, and their signing, more excited than ever, turns into a ballet of arms and hands, a pantomime of two bodies groping their way toward oneness, and perhaps even a kind of secular prayer. Supporting and supported by the melody and lyrics, this becomes exultant and exalting.

I don’t usually care for country-and-Western music, but this score wins me over—another barrier down. That Roger Miller, much better known for his nontheatrical works, died before he could do another musical strikes me as a substantial loss. All the more reason to rejoice in Calhoun’s lively and sensitive direction and idiomatically integrated but unhackneyed choreography, attesting to the show’s renewable durability in the right hands. Our unfamiliarity with most of the performers proves no diminishment. This co-production with the Roundabout Theatre and two other groups originated at Deaf West Theatre, whose pockets are rather less deep than the Mississippi, yet the acting ensemble is such as to earn my not mentioning any names: All are just fine.

And there is also the best kind of sentimental enrichment. The actor who plays Mark Twain and supplies the voice of Huck was the Huck of the 1985 original Broadway production. That adds a sense of continuity, of the child as father to the man, which is as near to immortality as those of us short of genius can hope to get.

Avenue Q is a puppet musical that takes off from, saucily spoofs, and cheekily de-kidifies Sesame Street. Several Sesame characters’ caricatures populate the godforsaken Avenue Q where the play and some of the characters are laid.

Princeton laments in song the uselessness of his just-acquired B.A. in English: Every apartment from Avenue A to P costing too much, he rents on Q, from the super, a young black woman with attitude who turns out to be Gary Coleman. Other live denizens—the fat, unemployed would-be comic, Brian, and his exaggeratedly Japanese therapist fiancée, Christmas Eve—sympathize with Princeton.

Even more sympathetic is the homely puppet Kate Monster, who falls for him. Less sympathetic are puppet roommates Rod, a buttoned-up suit of an investment banker and closet queen; and Nicky, a charming ne’er-do-well, who assures Rod in song about obliging him, “If I were gay (but I am not gay).” Other puppet characters are Trekkie Monster—whom the puppets’ creator (and one of the puppeteers), Rick Lyon, describes as “the love child of the Grinch and Chewbacca—a masturbator to Internet p*rn (song: “The Internet’s for p*rn”); also Lucy T. slu*t, the Mae West–ish knockoff of Miss Piggy; and the mean kindergarten teacher Lavinia Thistletwat, whose assistant-drudge Kate Monster is.

Princeton desperately seeks a purpose in life; Kate Monster needs money to start a school for monsters (a Monsterssori School, natch!); Christmas Eve, an unsuccessful therapist despite two M.A.’s, needs patients; Rod must find the guts to uncloset himself; Brian must commit to Christmas Eve—they finally have a Jewish wedding; and the two mischievous Bad Idea Bears, who make trouble for all, must reform, which, in a funny way, they eventually do. Out of such ingredients, we get an X-rated puppet show that has fun with racism (song: “Everyone’s a Little Bit Racist”), hom*osexuality, full frontal puppet nudity and sex, schadenfreude (song: “Schadenfreude”), obsession with p*rn, and other things that Sesame Street, from which some of these perpetrators graduated, couldn’t do.

The show is clever, but in a sophom*oric way; one torch song begins, “There’s a fine fine line/ Between a lover and a friend,” and there’s an even finer fine line between smart and smart-ass. Yes, the puppets are funny; the live actors as well as the puppeteers who, in plain view, act along with their puppets are versatile and personable; and persiflage in song and dialogue skips along in blissful smuttiness. Thus the closeted Rob boasts about a (fictitious) Canadian, and therefore absent, girlfriend: “Her name is Alberta, / She lives in Vancouver. / She cooks like my mother / And sucks like a Hoover.” The creators are Robert Lopez, Jeff Marx, and Jeff Whitty, and it’s a moot question whether the show is too whitty or too jeff by half. The audience members at the preview I attended were ecstatic: The laughter and applause were barely distinguishable in decibels from a terrorist raid. They all seemed to be graduates of a Monsterssori School.

The characters of Avenue Q express their secret longings in a song entitled “I Wish I Could Go Back to College.” The authors and their director, Jason Moore, I assume, have no such problems: In their hearts and minds, they’re already there.

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Big River, Avenue Q - New York Magazine Theater Review - Nymag (2024)

FAQs

What is the best show to see on Broadway right now? ›

12 Best Shows on Broadway Right Now
  • Hadestown on Broadway.
  • Moulin Rouge! The Musical on Broadway.
  • Six the Musical on Broadway.
  • Harry Potter and the Cursed Child on Broadway.
  • The Book of Mormon on Broadway.
  • MJ the Musical on Broadway.
  • Aladdin on Broadway.
  • Chicago on Broadway.
Feb 26, 2024

What theater was Avenue Q in? ›

Following its run at the Vineyard Theatre, Avenue Q opened on Broadway at the Golden Theatre July 31, 2003. The musical, featuring music and lyrics by Jeff Marx and Robert Lopez and Jeff Whitty, played 22 previews and 2,534 performances before closing September 13, 2009.

What is the #1 Broadway show of all time? ›

The Lion King sits at the top, with a Broadway gross of $1.9 billion. Dates refer to original Broadway productions, with notes added for future productions that outran the Broadway run.

What is the number 1 Broadway musical of all time? ›

The Lion King is the highest-grossing Broadway show of all time. Since its opening on Nov. 13, 1997, The Lion King has earned $1,539,318,552 and counting. The average ticket price is $104.29, and the top ticket price is $251.25.

What type of musical is Avenue Q? ›

A puppet-filled comedy follows a group of twenty-somethings seeking their purpose in big-city life. Winner of the Tony "Triple Crown" for Best Musical, Best Score and Best Book, Avenue Q is part flesh, part felt and packed with heart.

When did Avenue Q close on Broadway? ›

The Tony Award-winning musical Avenue Q, the surprise hit of the 2003-2004 season, ended its Broadway run September 13, 2009.

Is Avenue Q still on Broadway? ›

This show is closed.

Is Hamilton worth seeing? ›

We absolutely loved this. The cast were amazing, the story telling and music were fantastic and the set perfect! We were always going to book a show and we decided on this as we've heard great reviews of the one in the UK, and it did not disappoint! Would highly recommend.

What is the cheapest day of the week to see a Broadway show? ›

As a general rule, weekend tickets (starting with Friday night performances) are more expensive. The cheapest day and time to see a Broadway show is typically weeknights (Tues. - Thurs.). If you go to a weekday matinee you may find even better prices.

What day are Broadway shows least busy? ›

Saturday and Sundays are the most common days for afternoon performances. Wednesday matinees are a long tradition on Broadway as well, though not every show includes them. Mondays tend to be the most common "off day", though a few shows will typically play.

What is the most awarded Broadway show? ›

The Producers is the most-winning production, triumphing in 12 categories including Best Musical.

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