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A CurtainUp Review
ZannaDon't



Zanna Don't-- Does!
A Second Look by Brad Bradley

Jai Rodriguez
Jai Rodriguez
(Photo: Joan Marcus)
Having seen Zanna, Don’t both in its limited fall engagement and in its current commercial incarnation, the show is as entertaining as ever, and in a word, better. New cast members Jai Rodriguez (as the magically-empowered Cupid-like title character who also has ancestry in Shakespeare’s Puck) and Enrico Rodriguez, apparently no relation, (as a much-admired chess player who is especially affected by the vagaries of love) add an extra measure of fun and energy, as does the show’s continuing director/choreographer Devanand Janki. The slightly expanded production values fit the comfortable Housman Theater very well, and the sound level remains crisp and balanced, important for a show often highly dependent on driving rock music that sometimes harks back to disco. Admirably, the winning score has both variety and a contemporary feel, perhaps permitting it to find a cross-generational appeal.

The plot resolution of this joyful fantasy has been complicated a bit, and the music tinkered with, too, both efforts apparently the product of the addition of Alexander Dinelaris to the show’s credits for "additional book and lyrics". In its retooling, Zanna, Don’t has grown by about a quarter hour, and while the show’s energy and assurance and entertainment levels also have grown, one wonders about the wisdom of making today’s notoriously restless audiences remain seated for close to two hours for such lighthearted material.

Despite its title, Zanna, Don’t is very much an ensemble show, and the eight-actor troupe is exemplary in all performing departments, notable especially in conveying an appealing mix of high-school exuberance and innocence, a challenge that in many teen-focused shows becomes cloying or smugly annoying.

John Houseman Theatre, IS AT 450 W. 42nd St.
Show Times: Tues - Fri @8PM, Sat @2PM & 8PM, Sun @3PM & 7PM. Tickets -- $65.
Running Time: 1 hours, 45 minutes (no intermission)
Viewed on Sunday, March 16, 2003 by Brad Bradley

The review of the original production below includes a list of song titles at the end of that review's production notes.



The Original Review by Macey Levin

The new musical Zanna Don't! currently at the Rodney Kirk Theatre on 42nd Street's refurbished Theatre Row would satisfy Gilbert and Sullivan's topsy-turvy view of the world. The show takes place in Heartsville, America, where gay relationships are the norm (of course, there is no explanation as to how new members of the population came along,) and a heterosexual is seldom if ever seen. They are also the subject of great pity and sympathy by the citizens of Heartsville.

The central character, Zanna, is an androgynous teenager who, with the aid of his magic wand, romps through his high school and other teen age hangouts as a Yenta the Matchmaker, pairing off couples like Mike and Steve or Roberta and Kate. But thunder strikes Heartsville when a heterosexual relationship develops. Zanna devises a solution that allows everyone to live happily ever after and also brings him Tank, his true love.

The show bounces from bright to trite but there are some clever lines and funny bits. A high school musical dramatizes a controversial issue in town: heterosexuals in the military. One of the romantic duets in the show-within-the show is entitled "Don't Ask, Don't Tell." The heterosexual couple contemplates going to San Francisco because "…I heard there are straight people there." At one point, a character announces, "My moms are going to freak!!" There are other bits that pop in just as Urinetown uses and satirizes Broadway shows and historical references.

Despite the reverse twist, the book written by Tim Acito is predictably conventional as are the themes which proselytize love and respect for everyone regardless of sexual orientation and that one must be true to oneself. These ideas are repeatedly hammered home.

The music and lyrics, also by Acito, cover a broad range of styles from disco to pop rock to country to romantic ballads. Much of it is generic and you don't catch yourself whistling any of it while exiting the theatre, though there are, again, some clever lines in the songs. Still, the music fits the piece and on that basis is integral and entertaining. The choreography by Devanand Janki, who also directed the show, is pedestrian and repetitive, but it is buttressed by the cast's talents and energy.

And that is the key to the production. The dynamic and effervescent cast of eight possesses terrific musical comedy voices and engaging stage personalities. Working as an ensemble, each actor has key scenes and solos. Their stereotyped characters are more than likeable thanks to the vitality and stage sense they display. Their enthusiasm jettisons off the stage and wraps itself around you.

This show is not very subtle but theatre does not always have to be full of symbolism and profundities. This is a piece, despite its heavy-handed moralizing and preaching, that is very entertaining. Though the music and the staging are less than innovative, the work of the cast is exhilarating. Is it worthwhile to see Zanna Don't? In a word. . . DO!

For a scrolling color picture of the cast go to the Zanna web site

ZANNA, DON'T!
Book and Lyrics by Alexander Dinelari
Music and Lyrics by Tim Acito
Directed and Choreographed by Devanand Janki
Cast: Adam Michael Kaokept, Anika Larsen, Darius Nichols, Amanda Ryan Paige, Robb Sapp, Shelley Thomas, Gregory Treco, Jared Zeus
Production Design: Wade Laboissoniere & Tobin Ost
Lights: Jeffrey Lowney
Sound: Robert Killenberger
Running time: 90 minutes (no intermission)
The Rodney Kirk Theatre, 410 West 42nd St., 212-279-4200
10/8/02-11/3/02; opening 10/17/02
Tues-Sat at 8pm; Sat and Sun at 3pm -- $25; Sr. Cit. $18
Reviewed by Macey Levin at 10/15 performance The show re-opened for an open run -- ending 6/29/03
Musical Numbers
  • WHO'S GOT EXTRA LOVE? Zanna, Ensemble
  • I THINK WE GOT LOVE Steve, Mike
  • I AIN'T GOT TIME Roberta, Ensemble
  • RIDE 'EM Kate, Roberta, Ensemble
  • ZANNA'S SONG Zanna
  • BE A MAN Zanna, Ensemble
  • DON'T ASK, DON'T TELL Kate, Steve
  • FAST Bronco, Tex, Loretta
  • I COULD WRITE BOOKS Mike, Ensemble
  • DON'T YOU WISH WE COULD BE IN LOVE? Roberta, Mike, Kate, Steve, Zanna
  • WHATCHA GOT? Roberta, Ensemble
  • DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT'S LIKE? Steve, Mike, Kate, Roberta
  • ZANNA'S SONG (reprise) Zanna
  • 'TIS A FAR, FAR BETTER THING I DO/BLOW WINDS Zanna, Ensemble
  • STRAIGHT TO HEAVEN Tank, Ensemble
  • SOMEDAY YOU MIGHT LOVE ME Zanna
  • STRAIGHT TO HEAVEN (reprise) Ensemble


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