The Denver Post

Slow-going musical may save Broadway’s soul

“Band’s Visit” stands apart in era of lavish shows

- By Steven Zeitchik Ahron R. Foster, The Washington Post

NEW YORK» Halfway through the new Broadway musical “The Band’s Visit,” a restaurate­ur in a remote Israeli town sings an aching ballad.

“Every day you stare to the west, to the south. You can see for miles, but things never change,” intones the cafe owner about a group of Egyptian musicians that have showed up at her doorstep. “Then honey in your ears, spice in your mouth — nothing’s as surprising as the taste of something strange.”

The lyrics refer to the leader of the band, a weathered soul played by Tony Shalhoub. But they also could describe the show — a lean, almost minimalist production — as its own form of honeyed strangenes­s.

In a time of lavish franchise production­s on Broadway — think “Frozen” or “Mean Girls” — “Band’s Visit” stands apart. Based on an obscure Israeli film of the same name from 2007, it has no brand recognitio­n or major studio backer — just an unknown title, an unfamiliar setting and an unfashiona­bly slow pace.

In other words, it comes with not a lot of overt commercial potential.

But what’s at stake as the show plays the 1,100-seat Ethel Barrymore Theatre is no less than the soul of one of America’s most cherished cultural industries. As Broadway tilts between originals by independen­t producers and polished entertainm­ent by deep-pocketed financiers, “The Band’s Visit” could become its great savior or signal its changing tide.

“I feel very exposed right now, very vulnerable. We don’t have the muscle of the other shows,” said Orin Wolf, “Band’s” rookie lead producer, as he fidgeted in the Barrymore basement a few days before opening night. “But I believe in a world where ‘The Band’s Visit” could be successful.

“At least,” he added, “that’s the world I want to live in.”

Musical Broadway was long a boutique business. Independen­t producers conceived ideas, honed them out on the road, then ideally rode a wave of good reviews to profitabil­ity back in Manhattan.

That can still happen. But the sector in recent years has seen a growing parade of brand names – blockbuste­r movies and TV shows retrofitte­d for the stage. Warner Bros., Fox and Paramount have joined behemoth Disney in mining their libraries, then dipping into piles of cash to produce and market their shows.

The coming months will augur new musicals such as “SpongeBob SquarePant­s,” “Frozen” and “Mean Girls,” which will join splash-fests like “Aladdin” and “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” in the land Helen Hayes once ruled.

Then there are the celebrity-driven production­s, like “Springstee­n on Broadway,” whose official ticket prices average more than $500 each.

Those forces — and of course “Hamilton,” an industry unto itself — have sent Broadway into the stratosphe­re of big business. Musicals accounted for a record $1.3 billion in ticket sales last year, up 36 percent from just four years earlier.

“The Band’s Visit” wants to prove you can grab a share of that with nothing more than quiet emoting and exotic Arabic instrument­s.

Wolf got the ball rolling about eight years ago when he watched Eran Kolirin’s film, about struggling Egyptian musicians who on a cultural exchange to Israel accidental­ly end up in a backwater town. Beloved mostly by cinephiles, its main claim to fame was a disqualifi­cation from the Academy Awards foreignlan­guage race because it violated an arcane rule requiring a uniformity of language. But Wolf, who lives in Silver Spring, Maryland, saw in it something deeper: a kind of musicality of the soul.

He spent a year persuading Kolirin to sell the stage rights, then began putting together an eclectic team. He hired Itamar Moses, a Yale-educated playwright of intimate dramas, to write the show’s book. David Yazbek, who had penned the music and lyrics for “The Full Monty” on Broadway, would do the same here. And David Cromer, a wunderkind director known for his unconventi­onal take on the American classic “Our Town,” was brought on as director.

“It seemed like if we were going to go for it,” Moses said dryly, “we should really go for it.”

The show debuted a year ago at New York’s Atlantic Theater Company offBroadwa­y. It offered startlingl­y long pauses and halting dialogue, like a slow-food demonstrat­ion at McDonalds. Critics and hard-core theater fans were enchanted.

Most shows like “The Band’s Visit” would simply end there. But the reviews were so strong, and the counter-programmin­g potential so great, Wolf gathered 22 independen­t investors to finance a move to Broadway, which cost a fraction of a bigbudget branded musical.

How to sell a show of careful language to audiences accustomed to big rhymes and bold spectacle is a challenge. Without a large marketing budget, producers have used other means: digital shorts about the characters, a spare poster that spotlights a doleful Lenk on a windswept desert. (The veteran Broadway marketer Allan Williams, who has worked on many branded shows, is leading the “Band’s” campaign as general manager; he declined to comment on the record for this story.)

But mainly producers hope that the sheer difference­s between this and everything else, including the media landscape itself, becomes a selling point.

“I think it might be a commercial thing for us — with all the noise, with all the ways words don’t really mean anything on social media, we can be a respite for you for ninety minutes,” Wolf said.

Noted Moses: “It cuts both ways — we don’t have the name recognitio­n of a super-famous movie, and we don’t have Hugh Jackman’s presence selling tickets.” But then again, he added, “the history of hit musicals is a history of unicorns.”

Producers unaffiliat­ed with the show say they’re heartened by its run.

“The movie studios are stepping up their efforts. But I think what ‘The Band’s Visit’ shows is that independen­t theater is alive and well,” said Ken Davenport, a veteran Broadway producer and prominent theater commentato­r. “It shows that the right creative impulse can run circles around branded content. It shows we need more of that.”

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