The Day

‘Pretty Woman’ and ‘Head Over Heels’ can’t quite overcome fundamenta­l flaws

- By CHARLES MCNULTY

Two new Broadway musicals with commercial hooks have opened this summer, one progressiv­e in its approach to gender and sexuality, the other regressive about such matters. But the same problem bedevils both shows: The creators haven’t conquered their source material.

“Head Over Heels,” which is the more inventive of the two, marries, of all things, Philip Sidney’s 16th century prose poem “Arcadia” with old hit songs from the Go-Go’s. “Pretty Woman: The Musical” adapts to the stage (with a new score by 1980s rock titan Bryan Adams and longtime collaborat­or Jim Vallance) the 1990 Garry Marshall film that turned Julia Roberts into a big-screen deity.

It’s an odd feeling as a critic to wish you could have enjoyed the musical with outdated social attitudes less and the more forward-thinking musical more. But politics doesn’t determine our experience in the theater, and for all its osten-tatious faults, “Pretty Woman” is helped by the charisma of its leads, Samantha Barks and Andy Karl.

The main problem of “Head Over Heels” is easily diagnosed: The music of the Go-Go’s isn’t a natural fit for a story that traffics in faux Elizabetha­n iambic pentameter. Hits such as “Our Lips Are Sealed” and “Vacation” are smoothly enough integrated into this dizzying pastoral romance, but a good deal of dross from the band’s back catalog is shoehorned into Jeff Whitty’s book, which has been adapted for this Broadway production by James Magruder.

The musical’s world premiere at the Oregon Shakespear­e Festival in 2015 revealed it needed more than fine-tuning. But the renovation job hasn’t fixed what may be a structural flaw in the fundamenta­l design.

The opening number, “We Got the Beat,” sets a sassy, effervesce­nt tone that Michael Mayer’s frolicsome staging tries to exploit from start to finish. His production is given a kinetic kick by Spencer Liff’s choreograp­hy. (The chorus dancers, looking like a Madonna troupe that wandered into a Renaissanc­e fair, practicall­y steal the show.) But there’s an inevitable whiplash in the movement from the 1580s of Sidney to the 1980s of the GoGo’s, and it’s not clear whom this curious hybrid is aiming to please. (If a Venn diagram exists mapping out the overlap of fans, the producers have no doubt locked the evidence in a basement safe.)

The plotting adds another layer of complicati­on. Although a huge influence on Shakespear­e’s nature-gamboling, gender-swapping romantic comedies, “Arcadia” isn’t a play, and “Head Over Heels” comes across as a grab bag of theatrical games. The tale is no more tangled than Shakespear­e’s notoriousl­y skeinish “Cymbeline,” but that’s a standard requiring a flow chart.

Basilius (Jeremy Kushnier), King of Arcadia, tries to outrun a litany of unfavorabl­e prediction­s concerning the faithfulne­ss of his wife, Gynecia (Rachel York), the romantic destinies of his daughters, Pamela (Bonnie Milligan) and Philoclea (Alexandra Socha), and the future of his kingdom by packing up his family to the forest. But the daughters’ suitors, the lovesick shepherd Musidorus (a game Andrew Durand) and the self-possessed Mopsa (Taylor Iman Jones), aren’t easily thwarted. And there’s little point in doubting the oracle Pythio (played somewhat stiffly by Peppermint), whose ambiguous prophecies are bound to come true.

The first half of “Head Over Heels” is ponderousl­y set up, but the second act is slightly more adept at stirring the affections. This jukebox experiment doesn’t succeed, but by the time “Mad About You” is reprised at the end, some genuine new wave Elizabetha­n feeling sneaks through.

“Pretty Woman” is not a property that needed to be trotted out in the #MeToo era. But the box office appeal of this rom-com is apparently never out of season, and the show has been raking it in, no doubt on the familiarit­y of its risque Cinderella story line.

The story of a Hollywood Boulevard sex worker who awakens the heart of a wealthy financier gobbling up companies only to bleed them dry mixes fantasies about money and love in a fairy tale that is more consumeris­t than erotic. (The film, which capers down Rodeo Drive with religious zeal, captures the 1980s “greed is good” zeitgeist.)

No, the Broadway musical doesn’t have the film’s secret weapon: Roberts’ toothy smile, balancing sly swagger with tender vulnerabil­ity. That absence will prove fatal to many hardcore fans of the movie. But Barks, who played Eponine in the film version of the musical “Les Miserables,” is a vibrant performer. She can’t usurp Roberts — no one could — but when she sings, she owns the stage, and she allows us to buy into Vivian’s (admittedly unadvisabl­e) wish of being the rare hooker rescued by a prince.

Barks is well matched by Karl’s Edward, the role played in the movie by Richard Gere. Karl is perhaps the most seductive musical theater leading man today, so it’s not impossible to overlook the character’s sins of narcissism, materialis­m and chauvinism. The chemistry between Barks and Karl may not be intensely sexual, but it is romantic, and this show depends on the compatibil­ity of their radiant talents.

The clunky book by Marshall and screenwrit­er J.F. Lawton is chockabloc­k with groaners. The score, though it contains some arresting melodies, is hampered by hackneyed lyrics and music that can sound like a rock star’s idea of Broadway songwritin­g. Yet when Barks and Karl sing, they temporaril­y steady the careening aircraft.

Directed and choreograp­hed by Jerry Mitchell (“Kinky Boots”), “Pretty Woman” has even less realism onstage than it had on-screen. The simplicity of the story helps to focus the audience’s attention, as does the spicy retreading of the Cinderella myth. For all its queasy-making gender dynamics, the show is built on an old romantic myth, in which the woman receiving the makeover by her social superior winds up humanizing the arrogant Svengali transformi­ng her.

 ?? MATTHEW MURPHY ?? From left, Andy Karl, Ezra Knight, Samantha Barks and Robby Clater in “Pretty Woman The Musical.”
MATTHEW MURPHY From left, Andy Karl, Ezra Knight, Samantha Barks and Robby Clater in “Pretty Woman The Musical.”

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