Total Rating: 
***
Opened: 
March 21, 2000
Ended: 
March 26, 2000
Country: 
USA
State: 
New Jersey
City: 
Newark
Company/Producers: 
Big League Theatricals, Inc.
Theater Type: 
Regional, Tour
Theater: 
New Jersey Performing Arts Center - Prudential Hall
Theater Address: 
One Center Street
Phone: 
(888) GO-NJPAC
Running Time: 
2 hrs, 15 min
Genre: 
Musical
Author: 
Book & Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II; Music: Richard Rodgers.
Director: 
Daniel Stewart
Review: 

 When the curtain goes up on this touring production of Rodgers and Hammerstein's The King and I to reveal the teeming port of Bangkok against a twinkling backdrop of stars, one is simultaneously transported back almost fifty years to its legendary Broadway opening and to the l850s when a young English school teacher, Anna Leonowens, arrived to teach the 67 children of the King of Siam. There is a monolithic and eternal quality to this musical, which is inscribed in the characters of Anna and the King, the exotic theme of East meets West, and the wonderful Rodgers and Hammerstein music.

Every production immediately refers to the original, every Anna to Debra Kerr, every King to Yul Brynner. Jill Van Velzer is the quintessential Anna -- from her erect and elegant carriage in voluminous 1860s satin gowns, crisp diction and full soprano to her commanding, no-nonsense delivery. Lego Louis as King, however, does not stand up well in Brynner's shadow. He is loveable and comic but lacks the vocal and dramatic size to be Ms. Van Velzer's equal. This is a lavish road show to say the least. Sequin-encrusted and brocaded Siamese costumes in tropical oranges, reds and pink are set off against ornate gilt columns, Thai elephant motifs and tiered Buddhist shrines and thrones. Shimmering chiffon drop curtains illuminated by purple and blue light periodically wash theset to change the production tones.

The Rodgers and Hammerstein songs -- "Whistle a Happy Tune," "Getting to Know You," and "Hello, Young Lovers" -- still have their old charm and the choreography by Jerome Robbins is brilliant, especially the dance pantomime sequence of "Little House of Uncle Thomas," based on Harriet Beecher Stowe's "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Yet, this jewel of a revival cannot make us forget the assumptions of Western moral superiority that underlie The King and I (once considered a pioneering feminist and multi-cultural work) are questionable today. Anna clearly has all the power in this production.

Without the towering figure of Yul Brynner, we feel very little regret at the passing of the King of Siam and with him the wonderful "barbaric" and exotic diversity of his court.

Cast: 
Lego Louis (King of Siam), Jill Van Velzer (Anna), Hana A. Alvarez, Musashi A. Alvarez, Joseph Bergquist, Andrea Y. Carter, Hai-Ting Allison Chin, Sarah Comley, Korina Crvelin, Lauren Marie Gonzalez, Steven Hou,Yuta Iwaki, Hae Jin Kim, Yufen Kung, Troy Raymond Lapersonerie, C.C. Lewis, Cody Lee Loscalzo, Erin Loscalzo, Samantha Loscalzo, Nena Otalvaro, Yuki Ozeki, Jason D. Ramirez, Chikako Saito, Julie Scofield, Chin Shang Shih, Warren Soo Hoo, Yasu Suzuki, Haruki Tamura, Elisa Tang, Leslee Warren, KevinW. Yamada, Satomi Yasutake-Markowitz, Taaga J. Young, Wen Zhang
Technical: 
Scenery: Zeke Leonard; Lighting: Charlie Morrison, Costumes: Yolan Pinter, Musical Direction; Laura Berquist; Sound Design: Thomas Bothof and David Curtis
Critic: 
Kathryn Wylie-Marques
Date Reviewed: 
March 2000