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Leap of Faith (musical)

Leap of Faith is a stage musical based on the 1992 American movie of the same name, which starred Steve Martin. The music is by Alan Menken, with lyrics by Glenn Slater and a book by Janus Cercone and Slater about a con man posing as a man of faith, who is redeemed by the love of a good woman.

Leap of Faith
Broadway Playbill cover
MusicAlan Menken
LyricsGlenn Slater
BookJanus Cercone, Glenn Slater
Basis1992 film Leap of Faith
Productions2010 Los Angeles
2012 Broadway (St. James Theatre)

The musical premiered in September 2010 in Los Angeles for a limited run through October, directed and choreographed by Rob Ashford.[1] The musical opened on Broadway in April 2012.

Production history

A workshop was held in May 2008, with Taylor Hackford directing. The cast included Raul Esparza as Jonas Nightingale and Elizabeth Stanley as Marla McGowan.[2] At the time, producer Tom Viertel said :"As with any productive workshop of a new musical, we learned a lot about 'Leap of Faith' last month, including what works well and what needs work. But we have no plans and have made no decisions to alter the creative team in any way whatsoever."[3]

Another workshop was held in New York in early 2010, with Sutton Foster and a new director, Rob Ashford.[4]

Leap of Faith, with Rob Ashford as director and choreographer, made its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles. Previews commenced on September 11, 2010, opening night was on October 3, with the run ending October 24.[5][6][7][8]

The show opened on Broadway at the St. James Theatre in previews on April 3, 2012, officially on April 26.[9] Raul Esparza, Jessica Phillips and Kendra Kassebaum played the lead roles, with direction by Christopher Ashley and choreography by Sergio Trujillo.[9][10] The book was revised by Warren Leight.[11] Menken discussed the style of the songs: "Menken told Playbill.com that his score is flavored with the sounds of gospel, country and American roots music."[9]

The production closed on May 13, 2012, after 24 previews and 20 performances. It was reported (by The New York Times) that the entire $14 million investment was lost.[12]

Synopsis

Note: Based on the Broadway production[11]

A con artist, the "Reverend" Jonas Nightingale, travels with his ministry, but his bus breaks down in a small Kansas town. The some-time reverend pitches a tent and invites the townspeople to a revival. However, the sheriff, a woman named Marla McGowan, is determined to stop Jonas from taking the people's money. Jonas is challenged when he becomes romantically involved with the sheriff. Her love forces the cynical Reverend to come to terms with his life.

Musical numbers

Cast and characters

Critical response

Los Angeles

The Backstage reviewer wrote: "Though the overlong show improves marginally during the home stretch, its story and themes never fully cohere, and the derivative, gospel-driven Alan Menken-Glenn Slater score is disappointing. By inserting superfluous Agnes de Mille-style ballet segments, as if this were a modern-day Rodgers-and-Hammerstein opus, and pumping up the volume and the histrionics, it's clear Menken, director-choreographer Rob Ashford, and co-librettists Slater and Janus Cercone envisioned this adaptation as more of an artsy prestige musical than a sentimental bromide for The Sound of Music crowd ... Esparza has a dynamic singing voice and is a formidable presence, but his Mephistophelean con man seems a shade too smarmy for us to buy into his eventual redemption. The performer also sometimes indulges in a mush-mouthed Brando broodiness that seems inappropriate here. Shields sings sweetly if not spectacularly and provides a welcome note of calmness amid the boisterous goings-on."[13]

Charles McNulty, in his review for the Los Angeles Times, wrote: "much of the score is derivative, the dancing often seems like ballet school parody, Shields' singing defensively retreats to the safest possible key and the closing moments are pure sentimental hokum. But there's a fascinating character in the middle of it all, and a performance by Esparza that digs deep into questions of faith, love and mystery. The show needs another overhaul, but it's easy to see why the creators have persisted for so long with this project: There's something uniquely compelling in the source material. I hope the collaborators press on (Broadway is apparently in their sights). They can begin with some radical pruning."[14]

Broadway

The show received mixed-to-negative reviews on Broadway, with critics writing generally of the show's unsurprising and predictable plot, Esparza's hardworking performance (whether for good or ill), and a bland and confused tone.

Ben Brantley of The New York Times called the show "this season's black hole of musical comedy, sucking the energy out of anyone who gets near it." He criticized Esparza for "[seeming] to keep a chilly distance from his character", and the show in general for working in "bad faith" and "[recycling] its clichés without a shred of true conviction."[15] Erik Haagensen of Backstage called the "ersatz musical" "a compendium of formulaic characters and clichéd situations all too obviously cribbed from better and more original works";[16] and Joe Dziemianowicz of the New York Daily News wrote that "nothing happens in this frustrating and manipulative new Broadway musical ... you don't see coming a mile away."[17]

Dziemianowicz also called Esparza's performance "big, bold and a little buggy, but ... never boring",[17] while Elisabeth Vincentelli of the New York Post (in a highly positive review) called his performance somewhat "sinister", but also alluring ("[Y]ou can also see why the good people of Sweetwater would so eagerly swallow Jonas's hooks: He's got some bright, snazzy lures.")[18] Scott Brown of New York Magazine, however, called Esparza "transparently shifty" and "[seeming] to be winking at his marks at every turn", and wrote that "there's not an ounce of adequately feigned sincerity in him."[19]

Brown also described the show as "persistently confused ... in tone, content, and mood", and that "Leap feels like the not-awful, not-wonderful product of a long series of compromises";[19] Elysa Gardner of USA Today (in a 2 1/2-star out of 4 review) called it "an odd, uneasy mix of souped-up razzle-dazzle and earnest romantic drama";[20] and David Cote of Time Out New York (in a 2 out of 5-star review) called the show "bland and confused", "never [finding] the right proportion of comic cynicism to wide-eyed spiritual wonder".[21]

Terry Teachout of the Wall Street Journal called the show "as slick as ice on Teflon", lacking in "sweat and heart" - but that "if you're looking for pure Broadway razzmatazz, Leap of Faith delivers the goods".[22]

Some critics, however, were more positive. Vincentelli wrote that while "you can see everything coming a mile away" in the show, "[t]he only surprise is ... how ridiculously fun it is" – and that "[i]f there's a lesson in Leap of Faith, it's that high-energy entertainment is the perfect sweetener".[18] Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune wrote that the show was "actually an interesting new American musical that, in its best moments, takes a look at a side of America that musicals usually fly right over", while praising the "admirably complex" Esparza as "the guy you want in your show when your leading character is having a crisis of faith", and that the show "delivers, with considerable flourish, the always-useful message that the more you think you know about life, the less the truth reveals itself."[23] David Finkle of TheaterMania described Esparza's performance as "his finest ... to date", and praised the show for having three of that Broadway seasons' best musical numbers (in "I Can Read You", "Dancin' in the Devil's Shoes" and "Are You On the Bus?").[24]

Awards and nominations

Original Broadway production

References

  1. ^ Jones, Kenneth (January 28, 2010). "Leap of Faith, Menken's Gospel-Filled Musical Comedy, Will Premiere in L.A." Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  2. ^ Gans, Andrew; Hernandez, Ernio (April 30, 2008). "Esparza, Kassebaum, White, Mann and More Take a Leap of Faith in Musical Workshop". Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  3. ^ Riedel, Michael (June 20, 2008). "No 'Faith' in Director". New York Post.
  4. ^ Horn, John (September 26, 2010). "Musical makes one 'Leap of Faith' after another". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  5. ^ Fick, David (September 11, 2010). "Take A LEAP OF FAITH: Previews Start Tonight". MusicalCyberspace.com.
  6. ^ a b . CenterTheatreGroup.org. Archived from the original on September 5, 2010. Retrieved December 25, 2010.
  7. ^ Hodgins, Paul (October 5, 2010). "'Leap of Faith' needs change of story". The Orange County Register. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  8. ^ Jones, Kenneth (April 22, 2010). "Leap of Faith, the Musical, Will Premiere in L.A. in September; Ashford Directs". Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  9. ^ a b c Jones, Kenneth (April 26, 2012). "Leap of Faith, With Raúl Esparza at the Musical Pulpit, Opens on Broadway". Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  10. ^ Cerasaro, Pat (November 15, 2010). "BWW Exclusive: Alan Menken Talks Tangled, Sister Act, Leap Of Faith, Hunchback, Aladdin & More". BroadwayWorld.
  11. ^ a b c Jones, Kenneth (April 3, 2012). "Come All Ye Faithful: Raúl Esparza Begins Preaching in Broadway's Leap of Faith April 3". Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  12. ^ Jones, Kenneth (May 13, 2012). "Leap of Faith, the Musical, Pulls Down Its Broadway Tent May 13". Playbill. Retrieved July 3, 2022.
  13. ^ (no author). "LA Theatre Reviews, 'Leap Of Faith'", backstage.com, October 4, 2010 (retrieved December 26, 2010)
  14. ^ McNulty, Charles. "Theater Review; It takes faith", Los Angeles Times, October 5, 2010, P.1, Part D
  15. ^ Brantley, Ben (April 26, 2012). "'Leap of Faith,' With Raúl Esparza at St. James Theater". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  16. ^ Haagensen, Erik (April 26, 2012). "NY Review: 'Leap of Faith'". www.backstage.com. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  17. ^ a b Dziemianowicz, Joe (April 26, 2012). "Theater review: 'Leap of Faith'". nydailynews.com. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  18. ^ a b Vincentelli, Elisabeth (April 27, 2012). "Celebrate 'Leap' here". New York Post. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  19. ^ a b Brown, Scott (April 26, 2012). "Theater Review: "Leap of Faith" Falls Short". Vulture. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
  20. ^ Gardner, Elysa (April 26, 2012). . USA Today. Archived from the original on April 30, 2012. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  21. ^ Cote, David (April 26, 2012). "Leap of Faith | in New York". Time Out New York. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  22. ^ Teachout, Terry (April 26, 2012). "Ersatz Antique". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  23. ^ Jones, Chris. "'Leap of Faith' is a musical with a message". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved June 12, 2019.
  24. ^ Finkle, David (April 26, 2012). "Leap of Faith". TheaterMania. Retrieved June 12, 2019.

External links

  • Official website for Leap of Faith on Broadway
  • Internet Broadway Database
  • Leap of Faith at the Music Theatre International website

leap, faith, musical, leap, faith, stage, musical, based, 1992, american, movie, same, name, which, starred, steve, martin, music, alan, menken, with, lyrics, glenn, slater, book, janus, cercone, slater, about, posing, faith, redeemed, love, good, woman, leap,. Leap of Faith is a stage musical based on the 1992 American movie of the same name which starred Steve Martin The music is by Alan Menken with lyrics by Glenn Slater and a book by Janus Cercone and Slater about a con man posing as a man of faith who is redeemed by the love of a good woman Leap of FaithBroadway Playbill coverMusicAlan MenkenLyricsGlenn SlaterBookJanus Cercone Glenn SlaterBasis1992 film Leap of FaithProductions2010 Los Angeles2012 Broadway St James Theatre The musical premiered in September 2010 in Los Angeles for a limited run through October directed and choreographed by Rob Ashford 1 The musical opened on Broadway in April 2012 Contents 1 Production history 2 Synopsis 3 Musical numbers 4 Cast and characters 4 1 Broadway 4 2 Los Angeles 5 Critical response 5 1 Los Angeles 5 2 Broadway 6 Awards and nominations 6 1 Original Broadway production 7 References 8 External linksProduction history EditA workshop was held in May 2008 with Taylor Hackford directing The cast included Raul Esparza as Jonas Nightingale and Elizabeth Stanley as Marla McGowan 2 At the time producer Tom Viertel said As with any productive workshop of a new musical we learned a lot about Leap of Faith last month including what works well and what needs work But we have no plans and have made no decisions to alter the creative team in any way whatsoever 3 Another workshop was held in New York in early 2010 with Sutton Foster and a new director Rob Ashford 4 Leap of Faith with Rob Ashford as director and choreographer made its world premiere at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles Previews commenced on September 11 2010 opening night was on October 3 with the run ending October 24 5 6 7 8 The show opened on Broadway at the St James Theatre in previews on April 3 2012 officially on April 26 9 Raul Esparza Jessica Phillips and Kendra Kassebaum played the lead roles with direction by Christopher Ashley and choreography by Sergio Trujillo 9 10 The book was revised by Warren Leight 11 Menken discussed the style of the songs Menken told Playbill com that his score is flavored with the sounds of gospel country and American roots music 9 The production closed on May 13 2012 after 24 previews and 20 performances It was reported by The New York Times that the entire 14 million investment was lost 12 Synopsis EditNote Based on the Broadway production 11 A con artist the Reverend Jonas Nightingale travels with his ministry but his bus breaks down in a small Kansas town The some time reverend pitches a tent and invites the townspeople to a revival However the sheriff a woman named Marla McGowan is determined to stop Jonas from taking the people s money Jonas is challenged when he becomes romantically involved with the sheriff Her love forces the cynical Reverend to come to terms with his life Musical numbers EditAct I Rise Up Ida Mae Ornella Isaiah Jonas Sam amp Angels of Mercy Fox in the Henhouse Marla amp Jonas Fields of the Lord Sam Jonas amp Angels of Mercy Step Into the Light Ornella Jonas Ida Mae Angels of Mercy amp Townspeople Walking Like Daddy Isaiah Lost Ida Mae amp Angels of Mercy I Can Read You Marla amp Jonas Like Magic Jake amp Jonas I Can Read You Reprise Sam amp Jonas Dancin in the Devil s Shoes Isaiah Ornella Ida Mae amp Angels of Mercy King of Sin Jonas Dancin in the Devil s Shoes Reprise Isaiah Ornella Ida Mae Angels of Mercy amp Townspeople Act II Rise Up Reprise Angels of Mercy amp Townspeople Long Past Dreamin Marla amp Jonas Are You on the Bus Ornella Sam Ida Mae Isaiah amp Jonas Like Magic Reprise Jake amp Jonas People Like Us Sam amp Marla Last Chance Salvation Jonas Angels of Mercy amp Townspeople If Your Faith Is Strong Enough Jonas Angels of Mercy amp Townspeople Jonas s Soliloquy Jonas Leap of Faith CompanyCast and characters EditBroadway Edit Reference Playbill 11 Raul Esparza as Jonas Nightingale Jessica Phillips as Marla McGowan the sheriff Kendra Kassebaum as Sam Nightingale Kecia Lewis Evans as Ida Mae Sturdevant Leslie Odom Jr as Isaiah Sturdevant Krystal Joy Brown as Ornella Sturdevant Talon Ackerman as Jake McGowan Michelle Duffy as Susie Raylove Dierdre Friel as Amanda Wayne Fletcher McTaggart as Fletch the Camera Guy Bryce Ryness as Zak C E Smith as Brother Amon Dennis Stowe as Brother Carl Roberta Wall as Emma Schlarp Los Angeles Edit 6 Raul Esparza as Jonas Nightingale Brooke Shields as Marla McGowan Nicholas Barasch as Boyd McGowan Jarrod Emick as Sheriff Will Braverman Kendra Kassebaum as Sam Kecia Lewis Evans as Ida Mae Sturdevant Leslie Odom Jr as Ricky Sturdevant Krystal Joy Brown as Ornella C E Smith as Titus Dennis Stowe as Cesar Bryce Ryness as Dude Brandon Wardell as AmosCritical response EditLos Angeles Edit The Backstage reviewer wrote Though the overlong show improves marginally during the home stretch its story and themes never fully cohere and the derivative gospel driven Alan Menken Glenn Slater score is disappointing By inserting superfluous Agnes de Mille style ballet segments as if this were a modern day Rodgers and Hammerstein opus and pumping up the volume and the histrionics it s clear Menken director choreographer Rob Ashford and co librettists Slater and Janus Cercone envisioned this adaptation as more of an artsy prestige musical than a sentimental bromide for The Sound of Music crowd Esparza has a dynamic singing voice and is a formidable presence but his Mephistophelean con man seems a shade too smarmy for us to buy into his eventual redemption The performer also sometimes indulges in a mush mouthed Brando broodiness that seems inappropriate here Shields sings sweetly if not spectacularly and provides a welcome note of calmness amid the boisterous goings on 13 Charles McNulty in his review for the Los Angeles Times wrote much of the score is derivative the dancing often seems like ballet school parody Shields singing defensively retreats to the safest possible key and the closing moments are pure sentimental hokum But there s a fascinating character in the middle of it all and a performance by Esparza that digs deep into questions of faith love and mystery The show needs another overhaul but it s easy to see why the creators have persisted for so long with this project There s something uniquely compelling in the source material I hope the collaborators press on Broadway is apparently in their sights They can begin with some radical pruning 14 Broadway Edit The show received mixed to negative reviews on Broadway with critics writing generally of the show s unsurprising and predictable plot Esparza s hardworking performance whether for good or ill and a bland and confused tone Ben Brantley of The New York Times called the show this season s black hole of musical comedy sucking the energy out of anyone who gets near it He criticized Esparza for seeming to keep a chilly distance from his character and the show in general for working in bad faith and recycling its cliches without a shred of true conviction 15 Erik Haagensen of Backstage called the ersatz musical a compendium of formulaic characters and cliched situations all too obviously cribbed from better and more original works 16 and Joe Dziemianowicz of the New York Daily News wrote that nothing happens in this frustrating and manipulative new Broadway musical you don t see coming a mile away 17 Dziemianowicz also called Esparza s performance big bold and a little buggy but never boring 17 while Elisabeth Vincentelli of the New York Post in a highly positive review called his performance somewhat sinister but also alluring Y ou can also see why the good people of Sweetwater would so eagerly swallow Jonas s hooks He s got some bright snazzy lures 18 Scott Brown of New York Magazine however called Esparza transparently shifty and seeming to be winking at his marks at every turn and wrote that there s not an ounce of adequately feigned sincerity in him 19 Brown also described the show as persistently confused in tone content and mood and that Leap feels like the not awful not wonderful product of a long series of compromises 19 Elysa Gardner of USA Today in a 2 1 2 star out of 4 review called it an odd uneasy mix of souped up razzle dazzle and earnest romantic drama 20 and David Cote of Time Out New York in a 2 out of 5 star review called the show bland and confused never finding the right proportion of comic cynicism to wide eyed spiritual wonder 21 Terry Teachout of the Wall Street Journal called the show as slick as ice on Teflon lacking in sweat and heart but that if you re looking for pure Broadway razzmatazz Leap of Faith delivers the goods 22 Some critics however were more positive Vincentelli wrote that while you can see everything coming a mile away in the show t he only surprise is how ridiculously fun it is and that i f there s a lesson in Leap of Faith it s that high energy entertainment is the perfect sweetener 18 Chris Jones of the Chicago Tribune wrote that the show was actually an interesting new American musical that in its best moments takes a look at a side of America that musicals usually fly right over while praising the admirably complex Esparza as the guy you want in your show when your leading character is having a crisis of faith and that the show delivers with considerable flourish the always useful message that the more you think you know about life the less the truth reveals itself 23 David Finkle of TheaterMania described Esparza s performance as his finest to date and praised the show for having three of that Broadway seasons best musical numbers in I Can Read You Dancin in the Devil s Shoes and Are You On the Bus 24 Awards and nominations EditOriginal Broadway production Edit Year Award Category Nominee Result2012 Tony Award Best Musical NominatedDrama Desk Award Outstanding Musical NominatedOutstanding Book of a Musical Janus Cercone and Warren Leight NominatedOutstanding Actor in a Musical Raul Esparza NominatedOutstanding Director of a Musical Christopher Ashley NominatedOutstanding Choreography Sergio Trujillo NominatedOutstanding Music Alan Menken NominatedReferences Edit Jones Kenneth January 28 2010 Leap of Faith Menken s Gospel Filled Musical Comedy Will Premiere in L A Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 Gans Andrew Hernandez Ernio April 30 2008 Esparza Kassebaum White Mann and More Take a Leap of Faith in Musical Workshop Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 Riedel Michael June 20 2008 No Faith in Director New York Post Horn John September 26 2010 Musical makes one Leap of Faith after another Los Angeles Times Retrieved July 3 2022 Fick David September 11 2010 Take A LEAP OF FAITH Previews Start Tonight MusicalCyberspace com a b Leap of Faith Ahmanson Theatre CenterTheatreGroup org Archived from the original on September 5 2010 Retrieved December 25 2010 Hodgins Paul October 5 2010 Leap of Faith needs change of story The Orange County Register Retrieved July 3 2022 Jones Kenneth April 22 2010 Leap of Faith the Musical Will Premiere in L A in September Ashford Directs Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 a b c Jones Kenneth April 26 2012 Leap of Faith With Raul Esparza at the Musical Pulpit Opens on Broadway Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 Cerasaro Pat November 15 2010 BWW Exclusive Alan Menken Talks Tangled Sister Act Leap Of Faith Hunchback Aladdin amp More BroadwayWorld a b c Jones Kenneth April 3 2012 Come All Ye Faithful Raul Esparza Begins Preaching in Broadway s Leap of Faith April 3 Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 Jones Kenneth May 13 2012 Leap of Faith the Musical Pulls Down Its Broadway Tent May 13 Playbill Retrieved July 3 2022 no author LA Theatre Reviews Leap Of Faith backstage com October 4 2010 retrieved December 26 2010 McNulty Charles Theater Review It takes faith Los Angeles Times October 5 2010 P 1 Part D Brantley Ben April 26 2012 Leap of Faith With Raul Esparza at St James Theater The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 12 2019 Haagensen Erik April 26 2012 NY Review Leap of Faith www backstage com Retrieved June 12 2019 a b Dziemianowicz Joe April 26 2012 Theater review Leap of Faith nydailynews com Retrieved June 12 2019 a b Vincentelli Elisabeth April 27 2012 Celebrate Leap here New York Post Retrieved June 12 2019 a b Brown Scott April 26 2012 Theater Review Leap of Faith Falls Short Vulture Retrieved June 11 2019 Gardner Elysa April 26 2012 Leap of Faith doesn t quite soar USA Today Archived from the original on April 30 2012 Retrieved June 12 2019 Cote David April 26 2012 Leap of Faith in New York Time Out New York Retrieved June 12 2019 Teachout Terry April 26 2012 Ersatz Antique Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved June 12 2019 Jones Chris Leap of Faith is a musical with a message Chicago Tribune Retrieved June 12 2019 Finkle David April 26 2012 Leap of Faith TheaterMania Retrieved June 12 2019 External links EditOfficial website for Leap of Faith on Broadway Internet Broadway Database Leap of Faith at the Music Theatre International website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Leap of Faith musical amp oldid 1096241581, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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