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- <text id=94TT1663>
- <title>
- Nov. 28, 1994: Theater:As If We Never Said Goodbye
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/THEATER, Page 82
- As If We Never Said Goodbye
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Andrew Lloyd Webber's Sunset Boulevard has finally arrived on
- Broadway. Like Cats and Phantom, it may not ever leave
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Walsh
- </p>
- <p> Few shows have arrived on Broadway hauling as much excess baggage
- as Sunset Boulevard, the Andrew Lloyd Webber megamusical based
- on the Billy Wilder film that opened last week. Having already
- conquered London and Los Angeles, Sunset has generated enormous
- expectations--reflected in a record advance sale of $38 million.
- There's been backstage drama aplenty, as the mercurial composer
- sacked not one but two leading ladies, and snubbed New York
- by opening the $13 million American production in Los Angeles
- last year. No doubt, legions of Lloyd Webber haters would love
- to see the infuriatingly successful British interloper have
- another flop like his last Broadway outing, Aspects of Love.
- </p>
- <p> Sorry, folks, but the show's a hit, thanks in large part to
- Glenn Close. The actress projects authentic glamour as Norma
- Desmond, the demented former silent-screen star who wins her
- final close-up on a police blotter. Close starred in the L.A.
- production and won the Broadway part after Lloyd Webber reneged
- on a contract with Patti LuPone, the creator of the role in
- London; it cost him $1 million to buy LuPone out. Faye Dunaway,
- meanwhile, was engaged as Close's successor in L.A., only to
- be fired when Lloyd Webber decided her voice was not up to the
- part; her $6 million lawsuit is pending. Close, her mobile face
- and twitching hands working overtime, captures all the character's
- narcissistic neuroticism, and she sings in a clear soprano that,
- if unschooled, is nevertheless a welcome relief from LuPone's
- raw edge.
- </p>
- <p> The radiant Sunset may not be Lloyd Webber's best score, but
- it is his most seamlessly and artfully constructed. There is
- a resemblance between this show and The Phantom of the Opera--reclusive mad protagonist conceives passion for young member
- of opposite sex--but that is merely plot. Musically, Sunset's
- real forebear is Evita. The angular, chromatic recitatives for
- Norma explicitly recall Eva Peron's egocentric ravings. If the
- music of the new show lacks Aspects' delicious subtleties and
- Phantom's gothic flamboyance, it still offers two of Lloyd Webber's
- best songs in With One Look and As If We Never Said Goodbye.
- </p>
- <p> Director Trevor Nunn and designer John Napier, the Cats team,
- have fashioned one coup de theatre after another, reprising
- Wilder's opening with the newly deceased hero (Alan Campbell
- as Joe Gillis) facedown in a swimming pool, and working up to
- a levitating mansion. This larger-than-larger-than-life approach
- doomed the gentle Aspects, but it suits the more histrionic
- material of Sunset. Some of the lyrics, though, have got to
- go. To have Joe sing that L.A. has changed a lot "since those
- brave gold rush pioneers/ Came in their creaky covered wagons"
- is ridiculous. L.A. barely existed in 1849; the gold rush took
- place 400 miles to the north; and the prospectors mostly came
- by sea, it being difficult to get wagons over the Rockies. Even
- in Hollywood they can't manage that.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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