The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bigger isn’t always better in Atlanta Lyric’s ‘Shrek’

- By Bert Osborne For the AJC

Under the enterprisi­ng guidance of Brandt Blocker (now in his 10th season as managing artistic director), Atlanta Lyric Theatre has built its reputation on the sort of gargantuan musical production­s more commonly associated with those national touring shows that frequently visit the Fox.

In the case of director/choreograp­her Chase Todd’s current staging of the Lyric’s “Shrek the Musical” — a Broadway version of the popular animated movie (book and lyrics by David LindsayAba­ire, music by Jeanine Tesori) — that includes another massive and lavish array of imported scenery and costumes (credited to Los Angeles-based designers Tom Buderwitz and Kate Bergh, respective­ly), plus a few imposing appearance­s by a mammoth dragon puppet.

On the surface, at least, it’s a sendup of fairy tales, set “once upon a time” in a land “far far away,” and replete with cameos by everyone from Pinocchio and Peter Pan to Little Bo Peep and the Ugly Duckling.

Shrek (played here by Ryan Everett Wood) is an antisocial ogre who ventures off from his secluded home in the swamp to rescue a damsel in distress, the feisty Princess Fiona (Randi Garza). He finds a jovial sidekick in the jive-talking Donkey (Quentin Avery Brown) and a prissy nemesis in the little Lord Farquaad (Vatican Lokey, who spends the bulk of his time on bended knees).

At heart, though, “Shrek” is a happily-ever-after romantic fable with a sweet message to impart about “true love,” about how beauty is only skin deep, and how there’s more than meets the eye to both the ugly ogre and the pretty princess, proverbial opposites who attract and discover that their similariti­es exceed their difference­s.

But those sentiments are often overshadow­ed or dwarfed by the sheer spectacle of the rest of the show — if not by its raunchy sense of humor, too, which is heavy on the belching and flatulence jokes (with prerecorde­d sound effects designed by Daniel Pattillo).

The biggest and flashiest production numbers (music direction by Billy Payne, and featuring a canned instrument­al track) spotlight Farquaad and his guards or villagers (“Welcome to Duloc,” “The Ballad of Farquaad”), that chorus of familiar cameo roles (“Story of My Life,” “Freak Flag”), and even that giant dragon (“Forever”).

The most memorable songs are wondrously delivered by the radiant Garza (her solo “Morning Person,” as well as “I Know It’s Today,” performed alongside Brittany Ellis and Mabel Tyler as younger versions of Fiona). Acting-wise, in large part unhidden behind a lot of prosthetic makeup (like Wood), not solely defined by a cumbersome costume (like Brown) and more than merely a sight gag (like Lokey), she manages to create the closest thing in the show to a fleshedout character.

Although her Fiona might (literally) cut loose with the best of them, in her finest moments Garza also demonstrat­es how much more a bit less can sometimes be.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA LYRIC THEATRE ?? Randi Garza (from left), Ryan Everett Wood and Quentin Avery Brown appear in Atlanta Lyric’s production of “Shrek the Musical.”
CONTRIBUTE­D BY ATLANTA LYRIC THEATRE Randi Garza (from left), Ryan Everett Wood and Quentin Avery Brown appear in Atlanta Lyric’s production of “Shrek the Musical.”

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