Chicago Sun-Times

A THRILLER OF A TRIBUTE

From first number, glossy musical shows it’s up to the task of capturing King of Pop’s essence

- BY CATEY SULLIVAN For the Sun-Times

If you were lucky enough to see Michael Jackson in concert, you know the seemingly impossible star power he exerted on stage and over a crowd. He was a luminous, peerless performer whether he was in an arena on tour or on the small screen dancing his heart out with his brothers as the Jackson 5 on “Soul Train.” When he debuted his robot dance as a teenager, Jackson had only begun to reveal the impact he’d have on not just pop culture, but culture. Period.

The glossy new musical “MJ” lets you know with its first big number — an eyepopping, dance-inducing rendition of “Beat It” — that this is a celebratio­n of the King of Pop enacted by a crew of performers up to the extraordin­ary task of capturing the essence of the Grammy-winning artist and his music.

Directed and choreograp­hed by Christophe­r Wheeldon (who won a Tony for his choreograp­hy), the musical that launched its first national tour in Chicago this week is at its best during its astonishin­g production numbers, epic renditions of “Billie Jean” and “Smooth Criminal” among the nearly three dozen Jackson tunes featured.

As the title character, Roman Banks is a force of nature, capturing the moves, the energy and the revolution­ary creativity Jackson embodied.

In two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Lynn Nottage’s book, the musical begins in 1992, as the rehearsals for Jackson’s “Dangerous” world tour are in their final days. From the rehearsal room, “MJ” moves between flashbacks and the present — from the Jackson 5’s genesis in their Gary, Indiana, home to an audition for Motown’s Barry Gordy to ultimately the incandesce­nt opening moments of the tour.

Jackson is played in his teen years by a charismati­c Brandon Lee Harris and as a child by an endearing Josiah Benson (who alternates in the role with Ethan Joseph). Throughout, a two-person MTV documentar­y crew (Mary Kate Moore and Da’Von Moody) follows the action and tries to get Jackson to open up about his music and more importantl­y, his life.

The 1992 setting means all that embroiled Jackson later — the 1993 allegation­s of sexual battery on a child, his arrest on child molestatio­n charges in 2003, and the 2005 trial that acquitted him on all counts — aren’t a factor. In this telling, Jackson is a tortured artistic genius who always delivers despite being hunted by the media, haunted by his past and under unmanageab­le pressure in the present.

“MJ” shows the terrible pressures Jackson faced as a child at the hands of a simultaneo­usly loving and abusive father, Joseph (Devin Bowles, who is also cast as Rob, Michael’s tour manager).

The musical remains at its most glorious during the big production numbers, which include a rich catalogue of Jackson hits, with Jackson’s ruthless perfection­ism shining through in Banks’ almost mind-blowing performanc­e. If you didn’t know better, you’d swear that was Jackson himself moving through the sinewy, rueful “Human Nature” and the crackling rage of “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ ” or the celebrator­y “Black or White.”

The epic “Thriller” scene somehow manages to be as riveting as the original, ground-breaking video. Here, the first monster to emerge morphs from within a looming silhouette of Jackson’s father. “They Don’t Care About Us” becomes a song of raging defiance punctuated by dance that’s all stabbing angles and angry stomps. When the Jackson 5 run through “ABC” in a montage of hits, they deliver the infectious, rhythm charisma of the group’s seminal performanc­es on “Soul Train” and “The Ed Sullivan Show.”

Paul Tazewell’s often literally dazzling costumes feature instantly recognizab­le renditions of Jackson’s indelible looks, from the billowy white shirt to the iconic silversequ­ined glove to the red “Thriller” and military-style jackets Jackson wore with such panache.

Like the costumes, the sets (by Derek Lane) and cinematic projection­s (Peter Nigrini) create a world of ever-shifting color and light, and an environmen­t that feels as elaborate as an actual Jackson tour’s massive production numbers.

“MJ” doesn’t truly delve into who Michael Jackson was beyond an iconic, perfection­ist performer. It’s a pop psychology portrait of an icon that avoids really digging deep or dealing with the most hellacious headlines and accusation­s Jackson faced. It’s irresistib­le, nonetheles­s.

 ?? MATTHEW MURPHY/MURPHYMADE ?? Michael Jackson (Roman Banks) and the cast of “MJ.”
MATTHEW MURPHY/MURPHYMADE Michael Jackson (Roman Banks) and the cast of “MJ.”

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