San Diego Union-Tribune

DARE TO DANCE

LGBTQ-centered movie musical ‘The Prom’ taps A-list talent to deliver an earnest message about embracing the different

- BY CHARLES MCNULTY

“The Prom” taps A-list talent to deliver an earnest message about embracing difference­s.

As incarnated by Meryl Streep in the Ryan Murphy movie musical “The Prom,” Dee Dee Allen is a fading Broadway star stitched together a la Frankenste­in from various divas.

She f lounces like Liza Minnelli, shimmies like Shirley MacLaine and bellows like Patti LuPone — all the while mugging for an invisible camera as though auditionin­g for the role of Norma Desmond in Andrew Lloyd Webber’s version of “Sunset Boulevard.”

Having just opened a new musical about Eleanor Roosevelt, Dee Dee is waiting with her costar, Barry Glickman (James Corden), for the reviews to declare their show a hit.

The Champagne starts flowing when the New Jersey Star-Ledger loves it. But The New York Times hammers a coffin nail so hard that Dee Dee and Barry fear their future will be nothing but understudy gigs on the dinner theater circuit.

The stars of “Eleanor! The Eleanor Roosevelt Musical” drown their sorrows at a cocktail lounge, where they commiserat­e with two other down-on-their-luck troupers, aging chorus girl Angie Dickinson (Nicole Kidman) and Juilliard grad turned sitcom star turned bartender Trent Oliver (Andrew Rannells).

Amid the orgy of self-pity, a lightbulb goes off: To rehabilita­te their careers, they need to transform themselves into celebrity activists, taking up a cause that will prove to the world that they’re not washed-up narcissist­s but theater people with genuine heart.

Scrolling tipsily through Twitter, Angie learns about a young lesbian high school student in Indiana whose prom was canceled by the PTA when word got out that she was planning to bring her girlfriend.

The story has gone viral, and before you know it these desperate hams are boarding a road company bus to the Midwest to turn around their publicity by helping Emma (Jo Ellen Pellman) become prom queen.

When these thespian do-gooders show up at her school with press agent Sheldon Saperstein (Kevin Chamberlin) in tow, an angry meeting about the canceled prom is already in session. “Who are you people?” asks an indignant Mrs. Greene (Kerry Washington), the head of the PTA, who is fanning the f lames of intoleranc­e.

“We are liberals from Broadway,” announces Trent, his Juilliard elocution inaugurati­ng a nutty new chapter in the culture wars.

On Broadway, where “The Prom” had its premiere in 2018, the laughter provoked by the musical’s setup was of gale force. Played by Broadway veterans (Beth Leavel and Brooks Ashmanskas) for an audience primed for backstage histrionic­s, the show seemed to f loat on a cloud of camp.

High hilarity, unfortunat­ely, proved difficult to sustain. Schmaltz intervened. As the musical stretched on, the book by Bob Martin and lyricist Chad Beguelin and music by Matthew Sklar turned generic.

The dynamics are reversed in the starry screen version, which starts on Netf lix today following a limited theatrical release last week wherever cinemas (or driveins) are open. The movie musical, shot up with Hollywood steroids under Murphy’s direction, strains to replicate the show’s opening exuberance. Streep, Corden, Kidman and Rannells are game,

but there’s an ersatz quality to the film. Lacking the charming touches of Al Hirschfeld, these Broadway caricature­s seem manufactur­ed in a cartoon studio in Burbank.

Corden makes Barry’s outbursts of singing and dancing seem perfectly natural, but not everyone carries a musical inside them. Rannells may be too much in his element, while Kidman appears in danger of being chewed up with the scenery her castmates are pigging out on.

Streep will delight all who savor the sillier side of the Oscar-winning grand dame. She pulls out all the Evita stops in her Indiana entrance number, “It’s Not About Me,” in which Dee Dee, strutting into the school auditorium as if it were Radio City Music Hall during the Tony Awards, protests that she’s not a celebrity carpetbagg­er. The fun isn’t so much about Dee Dee as watching Streep play a faltering prima donna to the hilt.

Mr. Hawkins, the school principal amiably embodied by Keegan-Michael Key, is Emma’s defender in the battle against Mrs. Greene (a character expanded in the film and given sharper edges by Washington). He’s also a Dee Dee Allen fan. “What kind of fan?” she demands to know, unaccustom­ed to virile heterosexu­al men taking an interest in her work.

A romance tentativel­y blossoms. It’s a refreshing reversal of the usual Hollywood practice of pairing nubile women with oldermodel men, but Murphy’s casting choices carry a neon glow.

There’s a reason beyond star power for recruiting Streep. And in a moment so small it’s easy to miss, she changes the climate of the film.

It happens in the lobby of the hotel, when Mr. Hawkins remarks to Dee Dee how nice it is to see Emma smile again. He explains that she has been having a hard time, even before all the prom controvers­y. Her parents threw her out of the house, at age 16, when she came out.

Dee Dee registers the meaning of this informatio­n beyond its public relations value. In a mere twitch, Streep finds a way of underscori­ng the film’s purpose even as she continues to spray theatrical whipped cream.

What’s perhaps most stirring about Murphy’s film is the commitment of his A-list talent to the cause of LGBTQ acceptance. “The Prom” f lirts at moments with being the most elaborate public service announceme­nt ever created, but I was moved by the scale of the sentiment.

Corden’s Barry, who says of himself, “I’m as gay as a bucket of wigs,” shares his

own torment of being rejected by his parents. Corden, a straight, married dad, may not have direct experience of what Barry faced. His clichéd queening should permanentl­y bar him from ever getting cast in “La Cage Aux Folles.” But the depth of pain in Corden’s dramatic interactio­ns with Streep is courageous. The scars of stigma revealed in his performanc­e

seem true.

Kidman initially seems too big a star for the role of Angie, a day drinker who bemoans that everyone, including Tina Louise from “Gilligan’s Island,” has gotten to play Roxie Hart in “Chicago” except her.

But in bucking up Emma for the public fight ahead, Angie grows in sympatheti­c interest. The fast friendship between these characters affords Kidman a Bob Fosse moment when Angie shows an agog Emma the empowering meaning of “zazz.”

The innocent simplicity of Pellman’s Emma stands in stark contrast to the frazzled grandiosit­y of her Broadway rescuers. Her semi-secret relationsh­ip with Alyssa Greene (an appealing Ariana DeBose) — yes, the daughter of the PTA’s anti-gay rabblerous­er — is complicate­d but touching in its wholesomen­ess.

Murphy has made a progressiv­e musical for the heartland. Compassion, inclusiven­ess and forgivenes­s are the prevailing themes in a film that enlists Tracey Ullman and Mary Kay Place (in mother and grandmothe­r roles) to put these values into practice.

If the musical numbers are more energetic than memorable, the finale brings all sides together in a euphoric glimpse of utopia. “The Prom” sometimes seems of a piece with the shopping mall settings that are central to the film. But what’s being glamorousl­y sold is an embrace of difference.

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 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON NETFLIX ?? Meryl Streep and James Corden play Dee Dee Allen and Barry Glickman, Broadway actors who arrive at an Indiana high school in an attempt to save their careers.
MELINDA SUE GORDON NETFLIX Meryl Streep and James Corden play Dee Dee Allen and Barry Glickman, Broadway actors who arrive at an Indiana high school in an attempt to save their careers.
 ?? MELINDA SUE GORDON NETFLIX ?? “The Prom” centers on a lesbian high schooler named Emma (Jo Ellen Pellman, in blue), whose prom was canceled because she planned to bring her girlfriend.
MELINDA SUE GORDON NETFLIX “The Prom” centers on a lesbian high schooler named Emma (Jo Ellen Pellman, in blue), whose prom was canceled because she planned to bring her girlfriend.

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