Sweet Smell of Success offers a brilliant, inspired cityscape set (once again) by the incomparable Bob Crowley with superlative lighting by the great illuminator Natasha Katz (once again), good songs by Marvin Hamlisch and Craig Carnelia, a book by John Guare, Broadway dancing at its best by a top-level ensemble imaginatively choreographed by Christopher Wheeldon, the powerful John Lithgow filling the stage with his energy and presence - all snappily directed by the ever-innovative Nicholas Hytner.
But the show is off-kilter. Something turns in your stomach because of the content. The two leading men, a reprehensible columnist (Lithgow) and a self-serving rat of a press agent (Brian d'Arcy James) have no redeeming features, and we can identify with neither as the decent people in the show are squashed like bugs. Lithgow is the protagonist, and he's such an attractive performer that being unable to identify with him because he's so rotten gives a feeling of unbalance, especially when he gets to do a vaudeville number near the end as vile acts he set in motion take place.
Is Sweet Smell a good show? Definitely. Did I have a good time? For much of it. Did I leave the theater with a satisfying catharsis? No -- with an ironic, unfulfilled sense of injustice.
Images:
Previews:
Sep 6, 2009
Opened:
March 14, 2002
Ended:
June 15, 2002
Country:
USA
State:
New York
City:
New York
Company/Producers:
Clear Channel Entertainment, David Brown, Ernest Lehman, Marty Bell, Martin Richards, Roy Fuhrman, Joan Cullman, Bob Boyett, East of Doheny & Harvey Weinstein. Executive Prod: Beth Williams & East Egg Entertainment. GM: Alan Wasser Associates.
Theater Type:
Broadway
Theater:
Martin Beck Theater
Theater Address:
302 West 45th Street
Phone:
(212) 239-6200
Running Time:
2 hrs, 30 min
Genre:
Musical
Director:
Nicholas Hytner
Review:
Parental:
adult themes, mild violence
Cast:
John Lithgow (JJ Hunsecker), Brian d'Arcy James, Kelli O'Hara, Jack Noseworthy, Stacey Logan, Mark Arvin, David Brummel, Jamie Chandler-Torns, Kate Coffman-Lloyd, Bernard Dotson, Allen Fitzpatrick, Kennie Ford, Lisa Gajda, Eric Michael Gillet, Laura Griffith, Joanna Glushak, Roy Harcourt, Michelle Kittrell, Jill Nicklaus, Steven Ochoa, Michael Paternostro, Eric Sciotto, Elena L. Shaddow, Drew Taylor, Frank Vlastnik.
Technical:
Choreog: Christopher Wheeldon; Press: Barlow-Hartman; Set/Costumes: Bob Crowley; Lighting: Natasha Katz; Sound: Tony Meola; Orchestrations: William David Brohn; Music Dir: Jeffrey Huard; Casting: Mark Simon; Prod Sup: Peter von Mayrhauser; Music Coord: Michael Keller; Prod Mgr: Juniper Street Productions.
Other Critics:
TOTALTHEATER David Lefkowitz ?
Critic:
Richmond Shepard
Date Reviewed:
March 2002