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- <text id=93TT1444>
- <title>
- Apr. 19, 1993: The Greatest Story Ever Sold
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Apr. 19, 1993 Los Angeles
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THEATER, Page 60
- The Greatest Story Ever Sold
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Dramatically wobbly and theologically muddled, a French extravaganza
- on the life of Jesus begins a North American tour
- </p>
- <p>By WILLIAM A. HENRY III
- </p>
- <p> On the 80-ft. movie screen, a bare-backed Jesus was being
- flogged, each crack of the whip booming like an earthquake from
- a sound system clearly meant to emulate its subject and raise
- the dead. On the 72-ft. by 52-ft. stage in front of the film,
- 12 barefoot Apostles in russet rags were running away from a
- dwarf wielding a big, white feather and Roman soldiers dressed
- like Darth Vader. Across the arena, in a distracting reminder
- of secularity, a vast glowing sign touted the spirituous appeal
- of Bud Light. At the audience's feet lay crumbs from loaves
- passed, in keeping with the biblical parable, by dewy-eyed cast
- members. "Share," they intoned as they pulled the bread from
- inside costumes in which they had run, jumped and sweated for
- an hour. Thus at the Centrum in Worcester, Massachusetts, opened
- the greatest story ever sold, a seven-month arena tour of a
- pageant from Paris titled Jesus Was His Name.
- </p>
- <p> If neither the subtlest nor the most sophisticated, this
- is likely to be the biggest theatrical event of the year. After
- playing to more than 600,000 people in 1991 and 1992, it is
- projected to reach up to a million in 31 cities in the U.S. and
- Mexico, in such venues as Cincinnati's Riverfront Coliseum this
- week and Milwaukee's Mecca next week. Sales have been slowish,
- although the opening-night audience offered a standing ovation
- and sustained applause.
- </p>
- <p> The show has the quasi-official cooperation of the Roman
- Catholic Church: the English text is by Monsignor Michael Wrenn,
- special consultant for religious education to John Cardinal
- O'Connor. But it is also being marketed to Protestant
- denominations. To cover all bases, the program includes a
- statement from the Anti-Defamation League noting the history of
- anti-Semitism in passion plays and saluting the "message of
- tolerance" conveyed by the tour's U.S. packager, Radio City
- Music Hall Productions. The 58-member cast includes several
- agnostics and Muslims, according to Jean Marie Lamour, 29, who
- plays Christ. But, he adds, "during the show, they are all
- believers."
- </p>
- <p> Lamour's English is heavily accented, and others in the
- cast can barely function in English. That doesn't matter: even
- in the French version, the actors do not speak. They just
- pantomime and lip-synch to a portentous voice-over narration
- that calls to mind Alexander Scourby somberly narrating some war
- documentary. This technique enabled the show to be imported
- intact, and will permit performances in Spanish in Mexico City
- and seven U.S. cities with large Hispanic populations.
- </p>
- <p> The text is sometimes magisterially suited to the operatic
- background music. But it is often cumbersome. (Sample: "From
- that day onward, they set about plotting to do away with him.
- On his part, Jesus refrained from coming and going freely among
- the people.") When Jesus preaches, the audience hears an inert
- medley of greatest hits--aphorisms strung together without
- logic or sequence.
- </p>
- <p> It might not be any better if Lamour spoke. He is more
- wooden than the Cross. He seems to have been cast because his
- expressionless features have the same effect Garbo's masklike
- face did at the end of Queen Christina; audiences saw complex
- emotions playing across her features while she was thinking, she
- said, of "nothing at all." This show is unlikely to lure back
- the lapsed, let alone convert the condemned. The faithful can
- impose their own meaning on Lamour's blank canvas.
- </p>
- <p> Director Robert Hossein, who conceived the show, also
- mounted the first version of the musical hit Les Miserables,
- though in static, arena-style tableaux rather than the Broadway
- staging. Radio City executive producer Scott Sanders likens
- Jesus to Les Miz. Says he: "These shows offer pain, despair and
- suffering followed by hope, ending in a joyous feeling of power
- and faith. That is quality family entertainment." With both
- Jesus and Les Miz, Hos sein has not so much told a story as
- relied on audiences to know it already. Jesus neither starts
- with the birth of its hero nor ends with his death, and it is
- decidedly nonchronological along the way. Billed as suitable for
- children, it may scare some and baffle others looking for
- incidents from Sunday school. It offers no miracle at the
- wedding in Cana, no ousting of money changers from the temple,
- not even seven veils for the dancing Salome to shed.
- </p>
- <p> Although it means to present Jesus as a revolutionary, the
- production lacks both political and metaphysical oomph. The
- framing device is the dream of a homeless man sprawled next to
- a sign reading NO HOPE. At the end, as other homeless people
- accept help from would-be good Samaritans, he glares until they
- leave. He is beyond salvation. Then he leaps up and runs off,
- pursuing an apparition of Jesus into the heart of backstage
- darkness. This leaves the theologically precise to wonder
- whether they are supposed to have just witnessed the Second
- Coming. But no. It's just the start of the curtain call.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-