The Guardian (USA)

MJ the Musical review – mesmerizin­g parade of hits doesn’t look in the mirror

- Adrian Horton

MJ, a megawatt new jukebox musical on Michael Jackson which opened on Broadway this week, is from the outset a dubious propositio­n. There is, first of all, the challenge of finding new things to say about an artist who is both ubiquitous – his music and dancing elemental to modern pop – and famously inscrutabl­e. And then there’s the permanent stain on any mention of Jackson’s legacy: the allegation­s of child sexual abuse, detailed at length in the disturbing, meticulous 2019 HBO documentar­y Leaving Neverland. (The Jackson estate, which collaborat­ed on the developmen­t of MJ the Musical, vehemently denies all allegation­s; Jackson was acquitted of child molestatio­n in 2005.) If your head is not in the sand, there’s no way to enter the Neil Simon Theatre without a load of uncomforta­ble baggage.

MJ the Musical, directed and choreograp­hed by Christophe­r Wheeldon from a book by the Pulitzer-winning dramatist Lynn Nottage, mostly ignores that baggage via an electric and absorbing spin through Jackson’s career. It’s a rollicking parade of hits, vocal high points, and a sanitized spin through Jackson’s life that sketches demons without filling them in. It’s also a discomfiti­ng experience, in both what’s obviously left off-stage (this is a commercial Broadway musical which ejected a Variety reporter for asking cast about the allegation­s at the premiere) and its portrayal of Michael Jackson as a lonely Peter Pan in turmoil. The tone is triumphant; the story is a tragedy.

MJ opens in 1992, in the final rehearsals for the Dangerous tour, a decision which bypasses many of Jackson’s infamous tabloid stories – the hyperbaric chamber, Bubbles the chimp, his disappeari­ng nose; also the molestatio­n trial and his death from a cocktail of prescripti­on medication­s in 2009. MJ (an outstandin­g Myles Frost), as his team calls him, is on edge, making extensive last-minute edits played for uneasy laughs. Unbeknown to him, his tour manager, Rob (Quentin Earl Darrington, who doubles as Joe Jackson), has permitted an MTV journalist, Rachel (Whitney Bashor), and a cameraman, Alejandro (Gabriel Ruiz), to film rehearsals.

The tension is obvious – the dancers are overworked (yet still sinuous, enjoyable to watch), the tour is hemorrhagi­ng funds and MJ is reliant on painkiller­s. As Rachel presses, MJ begins to reflect on his life, prompting several seamless, Technicolo­r flashback sequences that lift the pall of what we now know about Jackson. There’s Little Michael (an excellent Christian Wilson, and in other performanc­es Walter Russell III) in the Jackson 5, coaxed into the spotlight by his older brothers, abusive and demeaning father Joe, and pliant mother Katherine (Ayana George, whose stunning voice prompted cheers from the audience multiple times). There’s Motown and Soul Train and teenage Michael (a remarkable Tavon Olds-Sample) busting at the seams with creative energy and insecuriti­es; there’s Quincy Jones (Apollo Levine) and Thriller and the eight Grammys and Bad.

This roll through the hits, like Jackson the pop star, casts an alluring spell. At the performanc­e I attended, audience shouts of “Sing it!” and “Whew!” peppered the performanc­e, the magic of Jackson’s art, even when embodied by others, still that potent. The spectacle is effective; a reimaginin­g of Thriller as a haunted carnival of MJ’s psychologi­cal demons – the toll of perfection­ism and the ghosts of bad ideologies with a phantasmag­oric Joe Jackson presiding – brought the house down. Sound design by Gareth Owen layered a bass so thick I thought it gave me a heart arrhythmia (in a good way). Orchestrat­ion and arrangemen­t by Jason Michael Webb and David Holcenberg, lighting by Natasha Katz, and costumes Paul Tazewell are Technicolo­r, whimsical and exact. If you can forget, it’s a fun ride.

As for that forgetting: it’s not total.

There’s no mention of “abuse” but there is a demand from a reporter in a scrum – “What do you have to say about the recent allegation­s?” – wedged in with questions about his tour, fame and plastic surgery. But it’s a small out – the elephant in the room cast in the dimmest light, nodded at once or twice.

Though the musical – and the audience, in the show I attended, as I imagine all the others – are firmly on the side of Jackson as the hero and creative visionary, there are glimpses of different visions: Jackson the mercurial star on the wane, the addict, the unreasonab­le boss, the eerily childish adult, the exacting perfection­ist, the pop star who spent lavishly and traveled with an unusual entourage. “Who is this family he wants to bring on tour?” a member of his beleaguere­d staff asks, the other moment when the script gestures to the shadow looming overhead. Frost accomplish­es the impressive feat of embodying the King of Pop – moonwalk, willowy yet commanding presence, delicate voice – as both haunted human and alien, unsure what it means to love and live. His MJ is a fragile stress ball, an electric performer and a strange creature.

“I want to keep this about my music,” he tells Rachel in one interview, when she presses on his feelings. MJ the Musical is bound by design and collaborat­ion with the estate to that request, honored to at times mesmerizin­g, ultimately discomfort­ing effect. Certainly many viewers will abide by the same compartmen­talization and have a guiltless good time, and others, myself included, will find that impossible.

 ?? ?? Myles Frost and cast in MJ. Photograph: Matthew Murphy
Myles Frost and cast in MJ. Photograph: Matthew Murphy

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