May 20 - June 6, 2015
at
Gateway Playhouse
The Long Island Advance
Linda Leuzzi
It’s a coup for The Gateway to present the first regional production of “Rock of Ages,”which closed on Broadway in January as its 27th-longest running show. But to also get Tommy Kessler, the lead guitarist for the rock group Blondie, to reprise his Broadway role as on-stage lead guitarist is quite a feat.
This rock musical debuted the Gateway season Wednesday night with an all-out wild,funny, edgy energy that pulsates with strobe lights, audience interaction, and a story that revolves around songs from the likes of Pat Benatar, Steve Perry, Styx, Bon Jovi and Twisted Sister.
The legendary Bourbon Room, a rock club on Sunset Strip in the 1980s, is in the throes of its last days when drugs, sex and rock and roll were careening, and the Strip is threatened with revitalization. Narrated by Genson Blimline, another “Rock of Ages” Broadway alum who plays Lonny Barnett, he literally swings across the stage on a rope and gets the musical rolling, addressing the audience with hilarious asides. “Say hello to the person next to you. (Pause.) Not the one you’re with.” It’s a lead-in to “Livin in Paradise/Cum on Feel the Noize,” with an energetic ensemble and lithe dancers who kick it out and at other times swirl upside down on poles as the actors use plungers as mic props.
(After the show, check out the “West Side Story” photo in the lobby. Blimline, who played Big Deal, is in there.)
There is a romance. Anthony Festa as Drew Boley, who just wants to play rock music, and Emily Behny as Sherrie Christian, who yearns for acting stardom, meet in the Bourbon Room. Lovestruck, they stumble when it comes to conveying their true feelings. But it’s a lot of fun watching what happens in the interim.
Festa has amazing pipes. He was classically trained, then studied rock and belts out songs like “I Wanna Rock” with fierceness and passion, holding notes with strength and power.
Kelly Felthous as Regina, an aide to the mayor who caves in to developer Hertz Klinemann, the uptight German who wants clean and efficient living, is an adorable, fierce liberal who strives to hold the line and save the city’s energy. “We Built This City,” and “We’re Not Gonna Take It” are her anthems and she struts and stomps in her quest. There’s a sweet, funny attraction between Regina and Franz, Klinemann’s son, played by Michael Lorz. What a treat! He wants to run a pastry/confectionary shop and not march to his father’s demands. Franz is a campy, great standout, but he does break out in a hilarious showdown with his father.
Rob Marnell as Stacee Jaxx is the famous bad rocker who may be able to save the Bourbon Room, but is so skillfully over the top in his self-absorption and shallowness (catch his sort-of demise as a South American singer with a llama as his backup), you can’t hate him. Well, maybe when he disses Sherrie.
Is the show crazy? Yes. But crazy-great. Actors jump out of closets, converse with the audience, give advice about love (Amma Osei as Justice, also from the “Rock of Ages” Broadway cast, nails it when she guides Sherrie), make surprising confessions, and evolves as angels who throw out … angel dust.
Newsday Review
Steve Parks
Never mind your taste in classic rock. To me the phrase conjures the '60s British Invasion. But then you can't always get what you want. So when the chance to see Broadway's "Rock of Ages" presented itself, I took the opportunity with a smug sense of a slumming connoisseur.
The glam-metal rock of the 1980s, when MTV was actually about music, doesn't make my personal playlist. But the patina of time -- yes, this rock has aged better than wine coolers -- transforms the trash pop of Journey, Bon Jovi and Styx, et al, into countercultural signposts of the Reagan years.
Long Island is ripe for the first regional reincarnation of this post-hip celebration of what "Rock of Ages" creator Chris D'Arienzo calls "a sexier time" of big hair and big dreams. The Gateway delivers the goods with home-turf charm as if '80s rock were invented here. The musical features songs by artists with local roots "We're Not Gonna Take It" (Twisted Sister), "Hit Me With Your Best Shot" (Pat Benatar).
The reed-thin plot for this jukebox-rock musical, directed by Keith Andrews and featuring Blondie guitarist Tommy Kessler, is the confluence of rocky-road romance and urban-renewal demolition of the Sunset Strip and a rock dive known as The Bourbon Room.
Emily Behny as Sherrie, the Kansas girl in search of Hollywood Oz (think Dorothy with bleach-blond tresses and a micro-miniskirt) meets Drew (Anthony Festa), rock-star wannabe from Detroit. Their love is as inevitable as Steve Perry's "Oh Sherrie." They soar together in song, but when proprietor Dennis (a convincingly wasted Justin Colombo) books Stacee Jaxx for a save-the-Bourbon-Room fundraiser, Sherrie is seduced by his celebrity. True love goes astray in strip-joint and boy-band detours.
Amma Osei as the exotic-dance-club mama tests our eardrums on "Harden My Heart" while Rob Marnell as Stacee purposefully underwhelms (spoiler alert He's a villainous foil) on "Dead or Alive." As adversaries in the strip-mallization of The Strip, Kelly Felthous, Steve Brady and Michael Lorz bring on the farce. But no one outstrips Genson Blimline of Miller Place, narrator and wink-wink dramaturge, for rock-opera aplomb. He makes sure no one takes anything seriously.As the Journey finale implores, "Don't Stop Believin'."
If you can't rock to Gateway's "Ages," check your pulse.
The New York Times
Aileen Jacobson
“Rock of Ages,” now at the Gateway Playhouse in Bellport, is an entertaining, high-energy party. It is also exceedingly silly, but that’s a good thing. If this musical, featuring broad humor and 1980s pop songs, many of them from hair-metal bands like Poison and Twisted Sister, took itself seriously, it could easily become insufferable
Read the full NY Times review...
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/31/nyregion/review-of-rock-of-ages-at-gateway-playhouse-in-bellport.html?_r=0