[Dixielandjazz] "Cotton Club Parade" reviewed

Robert Ringwald rsr at ringwald.com
Tue Nov 22 12:15:00 PST 2011


The Cotton Is High and Shakin' at Encores! Show
by Frank Scheck
New York Post, November 21, 2011
In the opening number of "Cotton Club Parade," Duke Ellington's "Daybreak Express,"
the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra re-creates the sound of a railroad train loudly
barreling down the tracks. For the next ninety minutes of this dazzling musical revue
celebrating the glory days of the legendary Harlem nightspot, the energy never flags.
This "Encores! Special Event," conceived by Jack Viertel and directed and choreographed
by Warren Carlyle, is such a potent dose of theatrical anti-depressant that a prescription
should be required.
Paying tribute to Ellington's years at the club during Prohibition, the show features
songs by the famous composer and such contemporaries as Harold Arlen, Jimmy McHugh,
Dorothy Fields and others, as well as selected texts by Langston Hughes.
Twenty-eight performers and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, featuring Wynton
Marsalis, deliver nearly two dozen numbers, providing the perfect mixture of songs,
instrumentals and dance numbers. The vocal highlights include Adriane Lenox's caustic
"Women Be Wise," Carla Cook's heartfelt "I Can't Give You Anything but Love" and
Brandon Victor Dixon charmingly crooning "I've Got the World on a String" as dancers
tote red balloons behind him.
The dance numbers are dazzling. In "Peckin'" five performers execute tight unison
moves while keeping their arms ramrod stiff, to hilarious effect. Jeremiah "Showtyme"
Haynes, seemingly all limbs, and the mohawked Andrew "Dr. Ew" Carter have a fearsome
face-off in "Hottentot." And Jared Grimes lives up to the title of "Goin' Nuts" for
his ferocious tap dancing routine.
The orchestra, too, is given its chance to shine on such numbers as "The Mooche,"
"Braggin' in Brass" and the finale, "Rockin' in Rhythm."
This terrific show has been given a criminally short run, with only two performances
remaining through tomorrow night. But it's a safe bet that it will be back before
too long, hopefully to liven up a dull Broadway musical season.


--Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Fulton Street Jazz Band
530/ 642-9551 Office
916/ 806-9551 Cell
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