This review aired on KBAQ
“MARY POPPINS” TOUR AT ASU GAMMAGE BETTER THAN BROADWAY
”MARY POPPINS”
Broadway Across
The stage adaptation of Disney’s magical “Mary Poppins” arrived last week at ASU Gammage, and the scaled down but still elaborate touring version flows better than the clunky Broadway one.
The main change is the Banks’ house. On Broadway, it’s a massive three story structure that lumbers into place by plodding downstage. The massive construction drags the show’s pace to a creaky crawl.
For the tour, Disney Theatricals and British co-producer Cameron Mackintosh needed a more efficient house. Designer Bob Crowley created a clever structure that appears upstage as a small exterior elevation. As this swiftly moving piece glides forward, it unfolds to become the lush mansion. It’s not as spectacular as Broadway but it works better so this touring “Mary Poppins,” while still too long for the little ones, moves briskly.
Since the show centers in and around the Banks’ family including stern father George, kind but ineffectual mother Winifred, and two precocious children, Jane and Michael, the mansion is critical. The extraordinary nanny, Mary Poppins, arrives from nowhere to bring Jane and Michael the adventures their parents haven’t provided.
The stage version lacks the movie’s magic even though Mary still does much stage trickery. It eliminates the movie’s most magical moment, “I Love to Laugh,” and it’s belabored with four new but ineffective songs. Only “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” improves on the film version. The stage flying is limited to Mary but she gets around dramatically especially in her dazzling departure.
The touring cast is mixed. Caroline Sheen,
The kids who played Jane and Michael opening night, Katie Balen and Bryce Baldwin, and who alternate in the roles, were the best stage kids I’ve ever seen. Laird Mackintosh’s bland George and Blythe Wilson’s charmless Winifred add nothing.
While clever but repetitious, director Richard Eyre’s staging and Matthew Bourne’s choreography drag out the musical and never allow it to soar.
Grade: B

