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You'll Flip for Sprightly
Flappers Piece

THOROUGHLY MODERN MILLIE Book by Richard Morris and Dick Scanlan. New music by Jeanine
Tesori and new lyrics by Scanlan. With Sutton Foster, Harriet Harris, Sheryl Lee Ralph,
Gavin Creel, Marc Kudisch and others. Sets by David Gallo. Costumes by Martin Pakledinaz.
Directed by Michael Mayer. At the Marquis. Tickets: $55-95; (212)382-0100.

 eing of a certain age, I can remember when people went to Broadway
musicals to be entertained. This notion has long been out of fashion, but it started to
make a comeback last year with that show about the swishy director playing Hitler.
"Thoroughly Modern Millie," while not on that level, continues the trend. It
has a brightness, wit and high spirits that compensate for the artificiality inherent in
the 1967 movie upon which it is based.
Hardly an inviolable work of art, the tale of a girl who comes to New York to marry a
rich boss traded, in part, on the public's ambivalence about what was then called
"women's lib."
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| The musical version of
'Thoroughly Modern Millie' is high-spirited and unabashedly politically incorrect. |
The frivolity with which "Millie" treated the issue of what roles women could
play was a rebuff to the unrelenting humorlessness of early feminism.
The movie also traded on its stars Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler Moore, Carol
Channing and Beatrice Lillie all in their prime. (Lillie's, of course, lasted 40
years.)
The Broadway version has no stars, just loads of talented performers especially
newcomer Sutton Foster, who has the pert look, the silver voice and the dazzling legwork
to make an extraordinarily winning Millie.
The adaptation is actually far less labored than the original.
The story is the same. Millie arrives in New York during the flapper era and checks
into a hotel for single women run by a fearsome Chinese woman, Mrs. Meers, who determines
which girls have no family or friends to check up on them, renders them unconscious and
sells them into white slavery.
The musical's chief asset is Harriet Harris, who plays Mrs. Meers brilliantly. The
book, which Richard Scanlan adapted from the screenplay, has deftly avoided political
incorrectness by making Mrs. Meers a former actress. This allows Harris, who brought
unexpected humanity to "The Man Who Came to Dinner" a couple of years ago, to be
broad without charges of racial stereotyping. She plays it to the hilt.
Similarly, her two Chinese henchmen, played so innocently and earnestly by Ken Leung
and Francis Jue, are extremely endearing. Their dizzy songs in Chinese are among the most
hilarious moments in the show.
As the young man in pursuit of Millie, Gavin Creel could not be better. He dances and
sings with just the right light touch and charm.
Sheryl Lee Ralph brings showbiz muscle to the role of the chorus girl who struck it
rich. Marc Kudisch is wonderfully debonair as Millie's vain boss.
The score uses the original title song by James Van Heusen and Sammy Fain, a tune from
"The Mikado" with clever new lyrics, and other standards as well as many
original songs by Scanlan and Jeanine Tesori, whose 1997 "Violet" was so
affecting. Of the new songs, the best is "Gimme Gimme," which Foster sings with
irresistible power.
The score, orchestrated with period sizzle, is conducted with panache by Michael
Rafter.
David Gallo's sets pay homage to the lyrical portrayal of New York in the work of
artist Joseph Stella (Frank's dad). Martin Pakledinaz' costumes, especially Harris'
extravagant outfits, have great flair.
Michael Mayer's direction reins in the camp. Rob Ashford's choreography is lively and
energizing.
If you don't have a silly streak, you'd better steer clear. But if you're tough enough
to savor fluff, "Millie" is absolutely delightful.
E-mail: [email protected]
Original Publication Date: 4/19/02


B'way's Million-to-One Millie (4/18/02)

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