"Triassic Park, The Musical"at Soho Playhouse, June 23, 2012
If you're looking for a bit of cool summer froth, head downtown.
Mixing the metaphors of Gregory Maguire (Wicked), Mark Hollmann and Greg Kotis (Urinetown), and Douglas Carter Beane (Lysistrata Jones),
creators Marshall Pailet, Bryce Norbitz and Stephen Wargo spin the tale
that "...is not Jurassic Park..." from the perspective of the
dinosaurs.
Silliness abounds alongside cartoonish
concepts of religious foundations as our cast of three Velociraptors,
two T-Rexes and a "Mime-a-saurus" recount Michael Crichton's story of
creation, fatal flaws and chaos. (In their world, they refer to their
creator as Lab instead of God, setting off a series of nonsequiturs that
could be funny with a bit more refinement.) And, since all the
dinosaurs were created female so there would be no offspring, all the
characters are played as women.
Spoiler alert.
Leading
the charge is Morgan Freeman (a very funny and very white Lee Seymour)
as the narrator, providing exposition and spoilers ( "It's the frog
DNA!") as the evening progresses. Velociraptor of Faith (a most hunky
Wade McCollum), Velociraptor of Innocence (an awkwardly androgynous Alex
Wise), BFFs T-Rex 1 (a belting Shelley Thomas) and T-Rex 2 ( hot
pink-lidded Claire Neumann) who speak in unison, Mime-a-saurus (an also
hunky Brandon Espinoza), and the exiled Velociraptor of Science (a very
funny Lindsay Nicole Chambers) round out the cast as they invent
creationism for themselves to explain where they came from and how their
world works.
Once the frog DNA surfaces with T-Rex 2's
spontaneous genital metamorphosis from female to male. Faith sees it
as a demon that should be outcast. Innocence doesn't understand Faith's
unwillingness to accept change as natural. She learns then about the
existence of Science who lives outside the fence in exile. Further
revelations abound along with an under-used goat puppet.
Production values are clever, sets by Cite Hevner, costumes by Dina Perez and lights by Jen Schriever
Wrap all this up in a pop score by Mr. Pailet and run it in 85 minutes, and you get a show full of laughs and energy.
Triassic Parq, The Musical runs through August 5. Get tickets here
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